Effects of a Pneumonia Clinical Pathway on Time to Antibiotic Treatment, Length of Stay, and Mortality
Open Access
- 1 December 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Academic Emergency Medicine
- Vol. 6 (12) , 1243-1248
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1553-2712.1999.tb00140.x
Abstract
Objectives: A clinical pathway standardizing management for patients with an admission diagnosis of pneumonia was initiated after a previous study found delayed time to initial antibiotic administration, a longer length of stay, and higher mortality rate for the authors patients as compared with those in a “benchmark” hospital. The current study was undertaken to determine whether implementation of the clinical pathway resulted in statistically significant decreases for these measures, both in the initial year following pathway implementation and two years later. Methods: A retrospective chart review was completed for three cohorts of pneumonia patients admitted via the ED: 1) three months immediately prior to pathway implementation, 2) 10‐12 months after implementation of the pathway, and 3) 34‐36 months after implementation of the pathway. Four standard antibiotic regimens were used following pathway implementation: community‐acquired, community‐acquired penicillin‐allergic, nursing home‐acquired, and nursing home‐acquired penicillin‐allergic. Demographics, medical history, presentation signs and symptoms, process of care, and outcome data were abstracted from each patient's medical record. Results: The mean time to antibiotic administration decreased from 315 minutes prepathway to approximately 175 minutes during the first postpathway period and 171 minutes at three years (ANOVA, p < 0.0001). The percentage of patients who received antibiotics in the ED increased from 58% prepathway to 94% during the first postpathway period and 97% at three years (chi square, p < 0.0001). Length of stay decreased from 9.7 prepathway to 8.9 days during the first postpathway period and 6.4 days at three years (ANOVA, p < 0.0001). There was no significant change of in‐hospital mortality (9.6% prepathway to 5.2% and 4.9%) in the two respective periods. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that implementation of a pneumonia clinical pathway for the management of hospitalized patients admitted via the ED decreases the time to initial antibiotic treatment and increases the proportion of patients initially treated with antibiotics in the ED. These effects were evident in the first year following pathway implementation and sustained at the three‐year study interval.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Quality of Care, Process, and Outcomes in Elderly Patients With PneumoniaJAMA, 1997
- Quality of care, process, and outcomes in elderly patients with pneumoniaPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1997
- A Prediction Rule to Identify Low-Risk Patients with Community-Acquired PneumoniaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1997
- Prognosis and Outcomes of Patients With Community-Acquired PneumoniaJAMA, 1996
- Prognosis and outcomes of patients with community-acquired pneumonia. A meta-analysisJAMA, 1996
- Improving antibiotic delivery time to pneumonia patientsJournal of Nursing Care Quality, 1994
- Medical Section pf the American Lung Association: Guidelines for the Initial Management of Adults with Community-acquired Pneumonia: Diagnosis, Assessment of Severity, and Initial Antimicrobial TherapyAmerican Review of Respiratory Disease, 1993
- Pneumonia Mortality Reduction and Quality Improvement in a Community HospitalQRB - Quality Review Bulletin, 1993
- Differences in Length of Hospital Stay in Patients with Community-Acquired Pneumonia: A Prospective Four-Hospital StudyMedical Care, 1993