Abstract

Abstract Background In hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation has a 13–20% survival rate to hospital discharge. Do Not Attempt Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (DNACPR) orders reduce resuscitation activity in people who are unlikely to survive due to underlying co-morbidities. The project aimed to identify current DNACPR practice and cardiac arrest calls in an acute care hospital and to improve communicating and documentation of DNACPR decisions. Methods A baseline audit of 20 medical charts identified variable practice on documenting DNACPR, inappropriate cardiac arrest calls and poor communication between the multidisciplinary team and patients on DNACPR decisions. A sub-committee of Medical Clinical Governance developed a hospital wide Guideline and Proforma for DNACPR that included a treatment escalation plan (TEP). Using quality improvement methodology and plan-do-study-act cycles the DNACPR proforma and decision support framework was refined and tested. Implementation strategies included stakeholder engagement, education, re-formatting documentation and recruitment of ward champions over a six month period. Post implementation audit measured compliance with completing the proforma and resuscitation calls. Results Clinical audit in February 2023 of 33 patient medical records identified 100% (n = 33) of patients with a DNACPR decision had the correct form in use. 96% documented communication with patients. All proformas were signed by a senior decision maker, included a TEP and were filed correctly in the patients notes. There was a 25% reduction in cardiac arrest calls. Only 56% of proformas were signed by nursing staff. Conclusion Implementing a standardised DNACPR proforma was feasible and improved documentation, visibility and ease of locating DNACPR decisions. It promoted timely communication with patients and families setting realistic goals of care in the TEP. In turn there has been a reduction in cardiac arrest calls. Nurses role in the process remains sub-optimal and there is a need to understand the experience of patients and families.

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