Emergency department; Emergency nursing; Evidence-based guideline; Evidence-based practice; Implementation science; Knowledge translation; Patient safety; Sepsis.
Introduction:
Timely, evidence-based emergency care for sepsis saves lives. The primary aim of this systematic review was to examine the effect of implementation of guidelines for the ED management of sepsis on time to antibiotic administration. Secondary aims were to examine changes in evidence-based sepsis care and patient outcomes.
Method:
In August 2018, we performed a systematic literature review of English language publications from 1st January 2002 and 31st July 2018 indexed in a number of academic databases using search terms related to sepsis, emergency care, guidelines and evidence-based practice.
Results:
Twenty-four studies were included for analysis: all used longitudinal repeated-measures cohort study designs. The studies were of low-to-moderate methodological quality. Of the 24 studies included, 22 (92%) reported decreases in antibiotic administration times and two (8%) reported an increase in antibiotic administration time. All eight studies measuring compliance to completing all components of the sepsis guidelines, as well as all 12 studies measuring lactate sampling reported improvements in antibiotic administration times. Reductions in inpatient mortality ranging from 0.8% to 30.4% were reported in 12 studies and two studies reported increases.
Conclusion:
Implementation of local sepsis management guidelines in EDs improves the timeliness of processes of care and may improve patient outcomes.
Emergency department; Emergency nursing; Evidence-based guideline; Evidence-based practice; Implementation science; Knowledge translation; Patient safety; Sepsis.
卫生服务 ; 医疗护理 ; 医疗服务质量
混合人群
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