Abstract
Asthma exacerbations are a leading cause of hospitalization among children. Despite the existence of hospital protocols and national guidelines, little guidance is available regarding appropriate short-acting β-agonist (SABA) frequency discharge criteria. Our aim was to reduce the median length of stay (LOS) for children hospitalized with asthma exacerbations by 4 hours by changing the discharge requirement SABA frequency. Multiple plan-do-study-act cycles based on findings in our key driver diagram were used to decrease LOS. Our primary intervention was reducing the SABA administration frequency discharge requirement from every 4 hours to every 3 hours. After a feasibility pilot, this change was implemented throughout the hospital. Our intervention bundle included updating our evidence-based guidelines, electronic health record order sets and note templates, house-wide education, and a new process for respiratory therapists to notify physicians of discharge readiness. Our primary metric was LOS, with 3-, 7-, and 14-day same-cause emergency department (ED) revisits and hospital readmissions as balancing metrics. Statistical process control charts and nonparametric testing were performed for data analysis. Median hospital LOS was significantly lower in the postintervention period compared with the preintervention period (30.18 vs 36.14 hours respectively; P < .001). Statistical process control charts indicated special cause variation was achieved. No significant differences were observed in rates of ED revisits or hospital readmissions. Reducing the discharge requirement of SABA frequency from every 4 hours to every 3 hours resulted in a reduction in LOS, with no increase in ED recidivism or hospital readmission rates.
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