IMPORTANCE Children with severe neurological impairment (SNI) often take multiple medications to treat problematic symptoms. However, for children who cannot self-report symptoms, no system exists to assess multiple symptoms and their association with medication use. OBJECTIVESTo assess the prevalence of 28 distinct symptoms, test whether higher global symptom scores (GSS) were associated with use of more medications, and assess the associations between specific symptoms and medications. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTSThis cross-sectional study was conducted between April 1, 2019, and December 31, 2019, using structured parent-reported symptom data paired with clinical and pharmacy data, at a single-center, large, hospital-based special health care needs clinic.Participants included children aged 1 to 18 years with SNI and 5 or more prescribed medications. Data analysis was performed from April to June 2020. EXPOSURE During routine clinical visits, parent-reported symptoms were collected using the validated 28-symptom Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale (MSAS) and merged with clinical and pharmacy data. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURESSymptom prevalence, counts, and GSS (scored 0-100, with 100 being the worst) were calculated, and the association of GSS with medications was examined. To evaluate associations between symptom-medication pairs, the proportion of patients with a symptom who used a medication class or specific medication was calculated. RESULTSOf 100 patients, 55.0% were boys, the median (interquartile range [IQR]) age was 9 (5-12) years, 62.0% had 3 or more complex chronic conditions, 76.0% took 10 or more medications, and none were able to complete the MSAS themselves. Parents reported a median (IQR) of 7 (4-10) concurrent active symptoms. The median (IQR) GSS was 12.1 (5.4-20.8) (range, 0.0-41.2) and the GSS was 9.8 points (95% CI, 5.5-14.1 points) higher for those with worse recent health than usual. Irritability (65.0%), insomnia (55.0%), and pain (54.0%) were the most prevalent symptoms. Each 10-point GSS increase was associated with 12% (95% CI, 4%-19%) higher medication counts, adjusted for age and complex chronic condition count. Among the 54.0% of children with reported pain, 61.0% were prescribed an analgesic. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCEThese findings suggest that children with SNI reportedly experience substantial symptom burdens and that higher symptom scores are associated with increased medication use. Paired symptom-medication data may help clinicians identify targets for personalized symptom management, including underrecognized or undertreated symptoms.
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Written discharge instructions help to bridge hospital-to-home transitions for patients and families, though substantial variation in discharge instruction quality exists. We aimed to assess the association between participation in an Institute for Healthcare Improvement Virtual Breakthrough Series collaborative and the quality of pediatric written discharge instructions across 8 US hospitals. METHODS: We conducted a multicenter, interrupted time-series analysis of a medical records-based quality measure focused on written discharge instruction content (0–100 scale, higher scores reflect better quality). Data were from random samples of pediatric patients (N = 5739) discharged from participating hospitals between September 2015 and August 2016, and between December 2017 and January 2020. These periods consisted of 3 phases: 1. a 14-month precollaborative phase; 2. a 12-month quality improvement collaborative phase when hospitals implemented multiple rapid cycle tests of change and shared improvement strategies; and 3. a 12-month postcollaborative phase. Interrupted time-series models assessed the association between study phase and measure performance over time, stratified by baseline hospital performance, adjusting for seasonality and hospital fixed effects. RESULTS: Among hospitals with high baseline performance, measure scores increased during the quality improvement collaborative phase beyond the expected precollaborative trend (+0.7 points/month; 95% confidence interval, 0.4–1.0; P < .001). Among hospitals with low baseline performance, measure scores increased but at a lower rate than the expected precollaborative trend (−0.5 points/month; 95% confidence interval, −0.8 to −0.2; P < .01). CONCLUSIONS: Participation in this 8-hospital Institute for Healthcare Improvement Virtual Breakthrough Series collaborative was associated with improvement in the quality of written discharge instructions beyond precollaborative trends only for hospitals with high baseline performance.
Background Despite widespread use, the optimal implementation and clinical impact of FilmArray Meningitis Encephalitis Panel (MEP; Table 1) multiplex PCR testing of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in children with suspected (CNS) infections is unknown. Table 1: FilmArray Meningitis Encephalitis Panel Test Characteristics Methods A pre-post quasi-experimental cohort study to investigate the impact of implementing MEP using a rapid CSF diagnostic stewardship program was conducted at Children’s Hospital Colorado (CHCO). MEP was implemented with EMR indication selection to guide testing to children meeting approved use criteria: i. infants < 2mo, ii. immunocompromised, iii. encephalitis, iv. > 5 WBCs in CSF. Positive results were communicated with antimicrobial stewardship real-time decision support (Fig 1). All cases with CSF obtained by lumbar puncture (LP) sent to the CHCO microbiology laboratory meeting any of the 4 criteria above were included with pre-implementation controls (2015-2016) compared to post-implementation cases (2017-2018). Primary outcome was time-to-optimal antimicrobials (time from LP to 1st dose of antimicrobials targeted to identified pathogen, or cessation when no treatable pathogen identified). Figure 1: Rapid Cerebrospinal Fluid Diagnostic Stewardship Program Intervention Design Results Post-implementation (n=1127) and pre-implementation (n=1124) group characteristics are in Table 2. Following implementation, MEP was sent in 72% of cases, largely replacing pathogen-specific singleplex CSF testing (Table 3). Time-to-optimal antimicrobials decreased by 10 hours (p< 0.0001; Fig 2). There were no differences in time-to-effective antimicrobials, hospital admissions, antimicrobial starts or length of stay. Time-to-positive CSF results was faster (4.8 vs. 9.6 hrs, p< 0.0001), IV antimicrobial duration was shorter (24 vs 36 hrs, p=0.004) with infectious neurologic diagnoses more frequently identified (15% vs. 10%, p=0.03). Overall, 3% had bacterial and 9% viral CNS infection identified. Enterovirus (n=128) was most common, then HSV (n=28) and parechovirus (n=17) with similar detection rates between groups Conclusion Implementation of MEP with a rapid CNS diagnostic stewardship program improved antimicrobial use with faster results shortening empiric therapy. Routine MEP testing in high-yield cases rapidly detects common viral causes and rules out bacterial targets to enable antimicrobial optimization Disclosures Samuel R. Dominguez, MD, PhD, BioFire Diagnostics (Consultant, Research Grant or Support)DiaSorin Molecular (Consultant)Pfizer (Grant/Research Support) Samuel R. Dominguez, MD, PhD, BioFire (Individual(s) Involved: Self): Consultant, Research Grant or Support; DiaSorin Molecular (Individual(s) Involved: Self): Consultant; Pfizer (Individual(s) Involved: Self): Grant/Research Support
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