Improving Time to Antibiotics in Patients with Long Bone Open Fractures Presenting to the Pediatric Emergency Department
Improving Time to Antibiotics in Patients with Long Bone Open Fractures Presenting to the Pediatric Emergency Department

Improving Time to Antibiotics in Patients with Long Bone Open Fractures Presenting to the Pediatric Emergency Department

J Orthop Trauma. 2024 Aug 12. doi: 10.1097/BOT.0000000000002880. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate a new triage workflow aimed at improving time to intravenous antibiotics in open fractures to under 60 minutes of arrival to the Pediatric Emergency Department.

METHODS: Design: A prospective, multi-disciplinary, quality improvement project.

SETTING: A tertiary care, Level 1 Pediatric Trauma hospital in New York.

PATIENT SELECTION CRITERIA: Patients aged 17 and under with long bone open fractures between June 1, 2020 and May 31, 2021, excluding those transferred from an outside hospital, with non-long bone fractures and non-fractured, injured extremities.Outcome Measures and Comparisons: The new workflow involved splint removal and skin assessment during triage to identify open fractures. Serial Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles aimed to refine this workflow and reduce antibiotic administration time. Primary outcome: Percentage of open fracture patients receiving intravenous (IV) antibiotics within 60 minutes. Secondary outcome: Assessment of triage documentation regarding splint presence and removal. An exact Wilcoxon two-sample test compared time from patient arrival (quick-registration) to antibiotic administration before, during and after workflow implementation on 6/1/2020.

RESULTS: A total of 51 patients (33 male) aged 17 and under, with open fractures were reviewed: 25 during the pre-intervention phase 1/1/18-5/31/20, 14 during the intervention phase 6/1/20-5/31/21, and 12 during the post-intervention phase 6/1/21-11/30/21. Continuous improvement efforts via PDSA cycles focusing on education, reinforcement, recognition, and barrier identification increased the percentage of patients receiving antibiotics within 60 minutes from 36% to 87.5%. Median time and Interquartile range (IQR: 25th percentile-75th percentile) from quick-registration to administration was 86 minutes (IQR: 51-147) before 6/1/2020, and 34 minutes (IQR: 16- 42) thereafter.

CONCLUSION: The implemented triage workflow led to improved time to antibiotics to within 60 minutes for patients with long bone open fractures in the Pediatric Emergency Department.

LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level III. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.

PMID:39133512 | DOI:10.1097/BOT.0000000000002880