Standardization of clinical care pathway leads to sustained decreased length of stay following Nuss pectus repair: A multidisciplinary quality improvement initiative

J Pediatr Surg. 2020 Dec;55(12):2690-2698. doi: 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2020.08.009. Epub 2020 Aug 16.

Abstract

Background and purpose: Postoperatively, standardized clinical care pathways (SCCPs) help patients reach necessary milestones for discharge. The objective of this study was to achieve 90% compliance with a pectus specific SCCP within 9 months of implementation. We hypothesized that adherence to a pectus SCCP following the Nuss procedure would decrease postsurgical length of stay (LOS).

Methods: A multidisciplinary team implemented the pectus SCCP, including goals for mobility, lung recruitment, pain control, intake, and output. The full protocol included 42 components, tracked using chart reviews and a patient-directed checklist. The primary process measure was compliance with the pectus SCCP. The primary outcome measure was LOS; secondary outcomes were patient charges, patient satisfaction, and hospital readmission.

Results: Total study patients were n = 509: 159 patients pre-intervention, 350 patients post-intervention (80 implementation group; 270 sustain group). SCCP compliance data were collected on 164 patients post-intervention - 80 implementation, 84 sustain. LOS, ED visits, and hospital readmissions were recorded for all 509 patients. Mean LOS decreased from 4.5 days to 3.4 days, with >90% adherence to the pectus SCCP postintervention. There were no readmissions owing to pain despite earlier termination of epidural analgesia. Total patient charges decreased by 30% and patient satisfaction was high.

Conclusion: Using quality improvement methodology with strict adherence to a pectus SCCP, we had significant reduction in LOS and patient charge without compromising effective postoperative pain management or patient satisfaction.

Type of study: Clinical research; quality improvement.

Level of evidence: V.

Keywords: Length of stay; Patient charge; Pectus excavatum; Postoperative care; Quality improvement; Standardized clinical care pathway.

MeSH terms

  • Clinical Protocols / standards*
  • Funnel Chest* / surgery
  • Humans
  • Length of Stay*
  • Pain, Postoperative
  • Quality Improvement*
  • Retrospective Studies