Bringing quality improvement into the intensive care unit
- 1 February 2007
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Critical Care Medicine
- Vol. 35 (Suppl) , S59-S65
- https://doi.org/10.1097/01.ccm.0000252914.22497.44
Abstract
During the last several years, many governmental and nongovernmental organizations have championed the application of the principles of quality improvement to the practice of medicine, particularly in the area of critical care. To review the breadth of approaches to quality improvement in the intensive care unit, including measures such as mortality and length of stay, and the use of protocols, bundles, and the role of large, multiple-hospital collaboratives. Several agencies have participated in the application of the quality movement to medicine, culminating in the development of standards such as the intensive care unit core measures of the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. Although "zero defects" may not be possible in all measurable variables of quality in the intensive care unit, several measures, such as catheter-related bloodstream infections, can be significantly reduced through the implementation of improved processes of care, such as care bundles. Large, multiple-center, quality improvement collaboratives, such as the Michigan Keystone Intensive Care Unit Project, may be particularly effective in improving the quality of care by creating a "bandwagon effect" within a geographic region. The quality revolution is having a significant effect in the critical care unit and is likely to be facilitated by the transition to the electronic medical record.Keywords
This publication has 59 references indexed in Scilit:
- Intensive care unit quality improvement: A “how-to” guide for the interdisciplinary team*Critical Care Medicine, 2006
- A nationwide survey of intensive care unit discharge practicesIntensive Care Medicine, 2005
- Improving the ICUChest, 2005
- Intensive Care Unit Utilization and Interhospital Transfers As Potential Indicators of Rural Hospital QualityThe Journal of Rural Health, 2004
- Developing and pilot testing quality indicators in the intensive care unitJournal of Critical Care, 2003
- Critically ill patients readmitted to intensive care units—lessons to learn?Intensive Care Medicine, 2002
- Patients Readmitted to ICUsChest, 2000
- Are Readmissions to the Intensive Care Unit a Useful Measure of Hospital Performance?Medical Care, 1999
- Patients readmitted to the intensive care unit during the same hospitalizationCritical Care Medicine, 1998
- Implementing TQM in the health care sectorHealth Care Management Review, 1996