Sickle cell disease (SCD) is an inherited blood disorder affecting approximately 36,000 children in the United States, approximately 90% of whom are Black. The disease is characterized by recurrent, severe pain crises which result in high rates of emergency department visits and hospitalizations, and decreased quality of life. The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, as well as the American Society of Hematology, have endorsed pain management guidelines regarding the timeliness of care for children presenting with these acute pain crises. These evidence-based guidelines are infrequently followed, resulting in increased pain and hospitalizations. In additional to other barriers to following the guideline, structural racism has been proposed as a significant contributor and the New England Journal of Medicine recently called for the institution of SCD-specific pain management protocols to combat structural racism and reduce time to opioid administration. The investigators' long-term goal is to improve the care and health outcomes of children with acute painful vaso-occlusive crisis treated in the emergency department. The overall aim of the investigators is to test a care pathway using multifaceted implementation strategies to increase guideline adherent care for children in the emergency department with acute painful vaso-occlusive crisis.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
5,328
Implementation of care pathway as part of hybrid type 2 implementation effectiveness study
Children's Wisconsin
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States
RECRUITINGTimeliness of receipt of opioids
The percent of patients who receive first dose of opioids within 60 minutes of arrival and subsequent doses within 30 minutes of previous dose
Time frame: A maximum of about 6 hours as all opioids received during the ED stay will be captured
Median time to opioids
Median time from arrival to first opioid and then subsequent opioids
Time frame: A maximum of about 6 hours as all opioids received during the ED stay will be captured
Percent of children hospitalized
Disposition of hospitalization or discharge home
Time frame: A maximum of about 6 hours as that is the typical maximum time to disposition for patients
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