Improving inpatient hyperglycaemia in non-critically ill adults in resident wards through audit and feedback

Inpatient hyperglycaemia is associated with an increase in morbidity and mortality, number of rehospitalisations and length of hospitalisation. Although the advantages of proper glycaemic control in hospitalised patients with diabetes are well established, a variety of barriers limit accomplishment...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:BMJ Open Quality
Main Authors: Chelsea Chang, Alcibiades Fleires, Alfarooq Alshaikhli, Hector Arredondo, Diana Gavilanes, Francisco J Cabral-Amador, Jonathon Cantu, Daniela Bazan, Kathryn Oliveira Oliveira, Rene Verduzco, Lina Pedraza
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2024-03-01
Online Access:https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/13/1/e002480.full
_version_ 1850071636024229888
author Chelsea Chang
Alcibiades Fleires
Alfarooq Alshaikhli
Hector Arredondo
Diana Gavilanes
Francisco J Cabral-Amador
Jonathon Cantu
Daniela Bazan
Kathryn Oliveira Oliveira
Rene Verduzco
Lina Pedraza
author_facet Chelsea Chang
Alcibiades Fleires
Alfarooq Alshaikhli
Hector Arredondo
Diana Gavilanes
Francisco J Cabral-Amador
Jonathon Cantu
Daniela Bazan
Kathryn Oliveira Oliveira
Rene Verduzco
Lina Pedraza
author_sort Chelsea Chang
collection DOAJ
container_title BMJ Open Quality
description Inpatient hyperglycaemia is associated with an increase in morbidity and mortality, number of rehospitalisations and length of hospitalisation. Although the advantages of proper glycaemic control in hospitalised patients with diabetes are well established, a variety of barriers limit accomplishment of blood glucose targets. Our primary aim was to decrease the number of glucose values above 180 mg/dL in non-critical care hospitalised patients using an audit and feedback intervention with pharmacy and internal medicine residents. A resident-led multidisciplinary team implemented the quality improvement (QI) project including conception, literature review, educating residents, iterative development of audit and feedback tools and data analysis. The multidisciplinary team met every 5 weeks and undertook three ‘plan–do–study–act’ cycles over an 8-month intervention period (August 2022 to March 2023) to educate residents on inpatient hyperglycaemia management, develop and implement an audit and feedback process and assess areas for improvement. We performed 1045 audits analysing 16 095 accu-checks on 395 non-duplicated patients. Most audits showed compliance with guidelines. The monthly run-on chart shows per cent of glucose values above 180 mg/dL in our non-ICU hospitalised patients and an overall pre-to-post comparison of 25.1%–23.0% (p value<0.05). The intervention was well accepted by residents evidenced by survey results. We did not meet our primary aim to reduce hyperglycaemia by 30% and this combined with the audits showing mostly compliance with guidelines suggests that prescribing behaviour was not a key driver of inpatient hyperglycaemia in our population. This internal medicine resident and pharmacy interprofessional collaboration with audit and feedback for inpatient hyperglycaemia was feasible, well accepted and had a statistically significant yet small improvement in inpatient hyperglycaemia. The project may be helpful to others wishing to explore inpatient hyperglycaemia, interprofessional QI with pharmacists, resident-led QI and audit and feedback.
format Article
id doaj-art-da03d89ccb384e37b7c162fbf3d4d13c
institution Directory of Open Access Journals
issn 2399-6641
language English
publishDate 2024-03-01
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
record_format Article
spelling doaj-art-da03d89ccb384e37b7c162fbf3d4d13c2025-08-20T00:17:05ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open Quality2399-66412024-03-0113110.1136/bmjoq-2023-002480Improving inpatient hyperglycaemia in non-critically ill adults in resident wards through audit and feedbackChelsea Chang0Alcibiades Fleires1Alfarooq Alshaikhli2Hector Arredondo3Diana Gavilanes4Francisco J Cabral-Amador5Jonathon Cantu6Daniela Bazan7Kathryn Oliveira Oliveira8Rene Verduzco9Lina Pedraza10Internal Medicine, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley School of Medicine, Edinburg, Texas, USAInternal Medicine, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley School of Medicine, Edinburg, Texas, USAInternal Medicine, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley School of Medicine, Edinburg, Texas, USAInternal Medicine, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley School of Medicine, Edinburg, Texas, USAInternal Medicine, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley School of Medicine, Edinburg, Texas, USAInternal Medicine, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley School of Medicine, Edinburg, Texas, USADHR Health, Edinburg, Texas, USADHR Health, Edinburg, Texas, USADHR Health, Edinburg, Texas, USADHR Health, Edinburg, Texas, USAInternal Medicine, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley School of Medicine, Edinburg, Texas, USAInpatient hyperglycaemia is associated with an increase in morbidity and mortality, number of rehospitalisations and length of hospitalisation. Although the advantages of proper glycaemic control in hospitalised patients with diabetes are well established, a variety of barriers limit accomplishment of blood glucose targets. Our primary aim was to decrease the number of glucose values above 180 mg/dL in non-critical care hospitalised patients using an audit and feedback intervention with pharmacy and internal medicine residents. A resident-led multidisciplinary team implemented the quality improvement (QI) project including conception, literature review, educating residents, iterative development of audit and feedback tools and data analysis. The multidisciplinary team met every 5 weeks and undertook three ‘plan–do–study–act’ cycles over an 8-month intervention period (August 2022 to March 2023) to educate residents on inpatient hyperglycaemia management, develop and implement an audit and feedback process and assess areas for improvement. We performed 1045 audits analysing 16 095 accu-checks on 395 non-duplicated patients. Most audits showed compliance with guidelines. The monthly run-on chart shows per cent of glucose values above 180 mg/dL in our non-ICU hospitalised patients and an overall pre-to-post comparison of 25.1%–23.0% (p value<0.05). The intervention was well accepted by residents evidenced by survey results. We did not meet our primary aim to reduce hyperglycaemia by 30% and this combined with the audits showing mostly compliance with guidelines suggests that prescribing behaviour was not a key driver of inpatient hyperglycaemia in our population. This internal medicine resident and pharmacy interprofessional collaboration with audit and feedback for inpatient hyperglycaemia was feasible, well accepted and had a statistically significant yet small improvement in inpatient hyperglycaemia. The project may be helpful to others wishing to explore inpatient hyperglycaemia, interprofessional QI with pharmacists, resident-led QI and audit and feedback.https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/13/1/e002480.full
spellingShingle Chelsea Chang
Alcibiades Fleires
Alfarooq Alshaikhli
Hector Arredondo
Diana Gavilanes
Francisco J Cabral-Amador
Jonathon Cantu
Daniela Bazan
Kathryn Oliveira Oliveira
Rene Verduzco
Lina Pedraza
Improving inpatient hyperglycaemia in non-critically ill adults in resident wards through audit and feedback
title Improving inpatient hyperglycaemia in non-critically ill adults in resident wards through audit and feedback
title_full Improving inpatient hyperglycaemia in non-critically ill adults in resident wards through audit and feedback
title_fullStr Improving inpatient hyperglycaemia in non-critically ill adults in resident wards through audit and feedback
title_full_unstemmed Improving inpatient hyperglycaemia in non-critically ill adults in resident wards through audit and feedback
title_short Improving inpatient hyperglycaemia in non-critically ill adults in resident wards through audit and feedback
title_sort improving inpatient hyperglycaemia in non critically ill adults in resident wards through audit and feedback
url https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/13/1/e002480.full
work_keys_str_mv AT chelseachang improvinginpatienthyperglycaemiainnoncriticallyilladultsinresidentwardsthroughauditandfeedback
AT alcibiadesfleires improvinginpatienthyperglycaemiainnoncriticallyilladultsinresidentwardsthroughauditandfeedback
AT alfarooqalshaikhli improvinginpatienthyperglycaemiainnoncriticallyilladultsinresidentwardsthroughauditandfeedback
AT hectorarredondo improvinginpatienthyperglycaemiainnoncriticallyilladultsinresidentwardsthroughauditandfeedback
AT dianagavilanes improvinginpatienthyperglycaemiainnoncriticallyilladultsinresidentwardsthroughauditandfeedback
AT franciscojcabralamador improvinginpatienthyperglycaemiainnoncriticallyilladultsinresidentwardsthroughauditandfeedback
AT jonathoncantu improvinginpatienthyperglycaemiainnoncriticallyilladultsinresidentwardsthroughauditandfeedback
AT danielabazan improvinginpatienthyperglycaemiainnoncriticallyilladultsinresidentwardsthroughauditandfeedback
AT kathrynoliveiraoliveira improvinginpatienthyperglycaemiainnoncriticallyilladultsinresidentwardsthroughauditandfeedback
AT reneverduzco improvinginpatienthyperglycaemiainnoncriticallyilladultsinresidentwardsthroughauditandfeedback
AT linapedraza improvinginpatienthyperglycaemiainnoncriticallyilladultsinresidentwardsthroughauditandfeedback