This is a pilot quality improvement implementation study that will measure the impact of a rehabilitation bundle implementation on the outcomes of interest. Advancements in the care provided in Pediatric Intensive Care Units (PICUs) have led to fewer deaths in children. These improvements are unfortunately countered by the emergence of side effects of critical illness, known as PICU-acquired complications (PACs). Delirium, muscle weakness, drug dependency and withdrawal are increasingly common. PACs occur because children are often over-sedated and experience long periods of immobilization. PACs delay recovery, increase disability and worsen long-term function and quality-of-life. Although they are preventable, PACs are very common and frequently overlooked by clinicians. This study aims to "liberate"children from critical illness and improve their recovery and functioning after discharge, through an innovative rehabilitation bundle of 8 complementary steps (PICU Liber8) to reduce sedation, allow children to awaken and breathe comfortably, encourage early mobilization, and engage families in their child's care.
This is a pilot quality improvement implementation study that will measure the impact of a rehabilitation bundle. The objectives are: 1. Primary - Implementation Objectives: to determine the feasibility and resources required to implement PICU Liber8 in 2 PICUs, evaluate strategies for successful bundle adoption. Co-Primary - Process Objectives: to determine the impact of PICU Liber8 on the process of care. 2. Secondary Efficacy: impact on PACs and patient reported outcomes The methods consist of a PICU Liber8 Bundle Implementation Plan (Pronovost's 4 E's Framework), and measurement of the impact of Implementation through Orchestrated Testing (OT). For successful adoption of the PICU Liber8 bundle, the following are necessary: 1. A context appropriate implementation framework. 2. An implementation team leader. 3. Inter-professional team engagement (i.e. RN, RT, MD, pharmacy, allied health and family). 4. Ability to customize PICU Liber8 to the needs of each site. We will use the Pronovost's implementation framework, which has been shown to facilitate successful bundle adoption and improve the quality of patient care in adult and pediatric ICUs.17-19 This framework has 4 phases: Engage, Educate, Execute and Evaluate.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
130
Bundle of elements for quality improvement
McMaster Children's Hospital
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Children's Hospital London Health Sciences
London, Ontario, Canada
Completion rate of daily goals (compliance)
The total number and percentage of daily goals completed from a pre-established daily goals checklist that assess compliance with the bundle. This is considered part of the feasibility outcomes group.
Time frame: 18 months
Performance of the bundle assessed with qualitative (i.e., narrative) description and comparison between groups.
Evaluation of performance as narrative description and comparison between periods of study, about the impact of the bundle on the process of quality of care. This also is part of the feasibility outcomes group.
Time frame: 18 months
Perceptions about barriers and facilitators for implementation of the bundle
Qualitative (i.e., narrative) assessment, description, and comparison of the perceptions from key stakeholders (i.e., family members, patients, clinicians, administrative personnel, nurse team, etc.) between groups about perceived barriers and facilitators for the adequate bundle's implementation. This belongs to the acceptability outcome.
Time frame: 18 months
Economic analysis
Direct cost (in Canadian dollars) before and after the implementation of the bundle that measures activity-based costs associated with the implementation. Incremental costs of PICU associated complications will be added to this evaluation.
Time frame: 18 months
Incidence of morbidities
Measured as the composite incidence (number of new cases) of either delirium, iatrogenic withdrawal, pressure ulcers, or PICU acquired weakness.
Time frame: 18 months
Length of stay
Measured as total days in PICU and hospital, and hospital-free days at 30 days post PICU discharge.
Time frame: 1 month
Ventilator-free days at 30 days
This is a clinically important outcome, measured as days using mechanical ventilation and days without it.
Time frame: 1 month
30-day mortality
Measured as the total number of deaths (due to any cause) during the PICU and/or hospital stay.
Time frame: 18 months
Functionality
Using the Pediatric Evaluation and Disability Inventory-Computer Adaptive Test (PEDI-CAT), which measures abilities in three functional domains: Daily Activities, Mobility, and Social/Cognitive. The PEDI-CAT's Responsibility domain measures the extent to which the caregiver or child takes responsibility for managing complex, multi-step life tasks. A final score per several domains is calculated that ranges from 0 to 100.
Time frame: 18 months
Health related quality of life
Using the Peds-QL, which includes four Scales (Physical Functioning, Emotional Functioning, Social Functioning, and School Functioning) that are grouped together on the actual questionnaire. The tool creates a final score from 0 to 100 (higher scores indicates better).
Time frame: 18 months
Parental stress
Using the Pediatric Inventory for Parents, a 42 item score across 4 domains. Higher scores indicate greater frequency and difficulty.
Time frame: 18 months
Risk measurement of psychological sequelae.
The risk of psychological sequelae will be measured with the Children's Critical Illness Impact Scale (CCIIS) for children \>6 years of age, consisting of 23 items that result on the final scale (where higher scores are worse).
Time frame: 18 months
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