Quality improvement: the delivery of true early mobilisation in an intensive care unit
Quality improvement: the delivery of true early mobilisation in an intensive care unit
Early mobilisation initiatives within the critical care environment have been shown to improve outcomes for patients. Early mobilisation has been defined as occurring within the first two to five days of the intensive care stay, but in practice this can be difficult to deliver. We conducted a quality improvement (QI) project to deliver early mobilisation in a large general intensive care unit. Mechanically ventilated medical patients received an integrated package of care involving two additional daily sessions of mobility therapy, in combination with minimal sedation where possible. Prospective baseline data was collected from January to March 2012; the QI project commenced in April 2012. Improvement cycle 1 completed in March 2015 and improvement cycle 2 in March 2016. Results have suggested a reduction in time to first mobilisation for intensive care survivors from 16.3 days in 2012, to 4.3 days at the end of improvement cycle 2. This was associated with a decrease in mean intensive care length of stay from 20.8 days in 2012, to 11.2 days at the end of improvement cycle 2. This QI project enabled patients to mobilise out of bed within the first five days of their intensive care stay and to be discharged earlier from the ICU, on going analysis is required to verify these findings.
van Willigen, Zoe
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Collings, Nikki
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Richardson, Dominic
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Cusack, Rebecca
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van Willigen, Zoe
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Collings, Nikki
edbbb36c-a043-4c71-98ef-67bc2f6c4fad
Richardson, Dominic
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Cusack, Rebecca
dfb1595f-2792-4f76-ac6d-da027cf40146
van Willigen, Zoe, Collings, Nikki, Richardson, Dominic and Cusack, Rebecca
(2016)
Quality improvement: the delivery of true early mobilisation in an intensive care unit.
BMJ quality improvement reports, 5 (1), [u211734.w4726].
(doi:10.1136/bmjquality.u211734.w4726).
Abstract
Early mobilisation initiatives within the critical care environment have been shown to improve outcomes for patients. Early mobilisation has been defined as occurring within the first two to five days of the intensive care stay, but in practice this can be difficult to deliver. We conducted a quality improvement (QI) project to deliver early mobilisation in a large general intensive care unit. Mechanically ventilated medical patients received an integrated package of care involving two additional daily sessions of mobility therapy, in combination with minimal sedation where possible. Prospective baseline data was collected from January to March 2012; the QI project commenced in April 2012. Improvement cycle 1 completed in March 2015 and improvement cycle 2 in March 2016. Results have suggested a reduction in time to first mobilisation for intensive care survivors from 16.3 days in 2012, to 4.3 days at the end of improvement cycle 2. This was associated with a decrease in mean intensive care length of stay from 20.8 days in 2012, to 11.2 days at the end of improvement cycle 2. This QI project enabled patients to mobilise out of bed within the first five days of their intensive care stay and to be discharged earlier from the ICU, on going analysis is required to verify these findings.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 30 December 2016
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 490269
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490269
ISSN: 2050-1315
PURE UUID: beb8394a-998f-4118-82b8-9dda23b5c70f
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Date deposited: 22 May 2024 17:09
Last modified: 23 May 2024 01:54
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Contributors
Author:
Zoe van Willigen
Author:
Nikki Collings
Author:
Dominic Richardson
Author:
Rebecca Cusack
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