Abstract
To decrease the number of inappropriate pages after-hours by 50%. Over nine weeks, after-hours pages to the on-call resident at [INSTITUTION] Department of Urology were documented. Pages were deemed "appropriate" or "inappropriate" by three independent reviewers. The source of each page was reviewed and after several plan-do-study-act (PDSA) cycles, three separate interventions were created, directed at floor nursing, patient phone calls, and the call triage center. After a six-weeks implementation period, data was re-collected for nine weeks. Descriptive statistics were generated, and a Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare inappropriate pages pre- and post- interventions. In phase I, 48 shifts were recorded. The mean number of pages per shift was 8.9 (range 1-27), with 52.7% of pages considered "inappropriate." Most pages came from the wards (48.9%) followed by the emergency department (20.4%), patient phone calls (19.4%), and the call center (2.6%). From these domains, the call center had the highest proportion of inappropriate pages (90.9%). In phase II, 39 shifts were recorded. The mean number of pages per shift decreased to 6.0 (range 1-20), and inappropriate pages per shift decreased by 68.4%, (p<0.0001). By improving communication to nurses, patients, and call center personnel, inappropriate after-hours pages decreased by 68.4%- exceeding our aim. Future studies are needed to assess if the impact was sustainable over time.
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