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A clinical care pathway to improve the acute care of patients with glioma
Author(s) -
Natalie Riblet,
Evelyn Schlosser,
Jennifer Snide,
Lara Kunschner Ronan,
Katherine Thorley,
Melissa Davis,
Jennifer Hong,
Linda P. Mason,
Tobi J. Cooney,
Lanelle Jalowiec,
Nancy Kennedy,
Sabrina Richie,
David Nalepinski,
Camilo E. Fadul
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
neuro-oncology practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.666
H-Index - 14
eISSN - 2054-2585
pISSN - 2054-2577
DOI - 10.1093/nop/npv050
Subject(s) - medicine , glioma , multidisciplinary approach , health care , population , standardization , intensive care medicine , social science , environmental health , cancer research , sociology , political science , law , economics , economic growth
Background Patients with glioma are at increased risk for tumor-related and treatment-related complications. Few guidelines exist to manage complications through supportive care. Our prior work suggests that a clinical care pathway can improve the care of patients with glioma. Methods We designed a quality improvement (QI) project to address the acute care needs of patients with gliomas. We formed a multidisciplinary team and selected 20 best-practice measures from the literature. Using a plan-do-study-act framework, we brainstormed and implemented various improvement strategies starting in October 2013. Statistical process control charts were used to assess progress. Results Retrospective data were available for 12 best practice measures. The baseline population consisted of 98 patients with glioma. Record review suggested wide variation in performance, with compliance ranging from 30% to 100%. The team hypothesized that lack of process standardization may contribute to less-than-ideal performance. After implementing improvement strategies, we reviewed the records of 63 consecutive patients with glioma. The proportion of patients meeting criteria for 12 practice measures modestly improved (65% pre-QI; 76% post-QI, P > .1). Unexpectedly, a higher proportion of patients were readmitted within 30 days of hospital discharge (pre-QI: 10%; post-QI: 17%, P > .1). Barriers to pathway development included difficulties with transforming manual measures into electronic data sets. Conclusions Creating evidence-based clinical care pathways for addressing the acute care needs of patients with glioma is feasible and important. There are many challenges, however, to developing sustainable systems for measuring and reporting performance outcomes overtime.

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