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Quality Initiatives Shorten Mayo's Door-to-Balloon Time


 

WASHINGTON — Implementing a quality improvement initiative for ST-segment elevation MI shortened the time to treatment with primary percutaneous intervention from 104 minutes to 75 minutes in less than 7 months, reported Luis Haro, M.D.

In addition, the percentage of patients with a time to PCI (called door-to-balloon time [DTBT]) of less than 90 minutes increased from 42% to 82% during the study period of May 17-December 31, 2004. Since then, that percentage has gone up to 90%, and DTBT has decreased to 72 minutes, Dr. Haro, of the department of emergency medicine at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., told CARDIOLOGY NEWS.

Dr. Haro and colleagues implemented a quality initiative after a chart review of data from July 2002 to September 2003 showed that the hospital's DTBT was 200 minutes, he said at a meeting sponsored by the American Heart Association.

The initiative involved new processes to streamline communication between providers in the emergency department (ED), the catheterization lab, and the quality department.

“It was very hard to figure out where to find the data, since there are five or six areas to look for information, such as the ED chart and the cath lab report,” said Dr. Haro, quality chair of emergency medicine. A group from quality, communications, cardiology, nursing, and the ED met biweekly for 3 months before implementing the changes. The project's goals were to achieve a door-to-ECG time of 5 minutes, a door-to-activation time of 15 minutes, a door-to-departure-to-cath-lab time of 45 minutes, and a door-to-PCI time of 90 minutes. After closer scrutiny of the original data, the investigators adjusted the initial DTBT to 104 minutes.

The first change was to replace several ED clocks to server-based ones that display official U.S. time, since some of the original discrepancies in the data had to do with how times were recorded in the charts. “Now that every minute counts, it must be accurate,” said Dr. Haro.

Time stamps on a patient's small triage sheet track the initial door time, rather than the registration time, which was used as a point of reference in the past.

“When a patient has chest pain, we place them in a bed immediately and start the evaluation and initial management. Before, we had artificial times, since charts were sometimes generated after a patient had aspirin, oxygen, or an electrocardiogram, meaning 10–15 minutes were spent before their door time was recorded,” said Dr. Haro. Door-to-ECG times dropped from 14.4 minutes to 9.1 minutes.

Several other changes were made. Registration personnel use wireless laptops at patients' bedsides to help capture real-time data, which is immediately displayed on a monitor in the ED. This allows providers to assess whether their performance goals are being accomplished for that given patient.

The ED physician now activates the cardiac catheterization team without a cardiac consultation. Previously, time was wasted through numerous phone calls made among the ED, the CCU and cath team to try and organize a PCI. Now, the entire team is activated by a single group page within 15 minutes of the patient's arrival. The pagers display text to state the problem, the patient's location, and when the patient will be on the table. “It runs similar to a trauma system,” said Dr. Haro. Cath team members make one call in to a communications center to acknowledge the page, whereas CCU personnel just show up to join the team.

To improve door-to-departure times, 2-hour priority parking was given to cath lab members, who previously parked at a distance from the hospital; a dedicated phone line was established between the ED and the cath lab; and elevator keys were given to cath team members to bypass stopping at floors, which used to slow them down.

The American College of Cardiology recommends a 60–120 minute DTBT, while the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations recently changed recommended times from 90 to 120 minutes.

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