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Symptom Management: Terminal Agitation L21

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Presentation on theme: "Symptom Management: Terminal Agitation L21"— Presentation transcript:

1 Symptom Management: Terminal Agitation L21

2 Aim Primary Drivers Secondary Drivers
Improving the Management of Terminal Agitation (TA) with or without Delirium Aim Primary Drivers Secondary Drivers Staff education Role modelling Awareness of signs & symptoms Identify signs and symptoms of TA Motivated workforce Recognition of impact on family All staff feel empowered to highlight patients that have TA All staff recognise the importance of managing TA All dying patients who are experiencing terminal agitation have an effective individualised plan of care by September 2017 on the pilot wards (L21, J28 & J29) Culture of accountability & team work Identification & treatment of reversible causes Role of non-pharmacological measures Aware & confidence in using medications Role of the family in management of TA Care supported by CoDP multidisciplinary documentation Driver diagram To increase staff confidence in the recognition and management of terminal agitation To improve the documentation and evaluation of all interventions To improve the recognition of terminal agitation To improve identification of causes of terminal agitation and the use of non-pharmacological interventions To standardise the use of medications to manage symptoms Clear guidance on TA

3 Excellent examples

4 Staff confidence questionnaires Referral audit Interventions:
Measures: Case note audit to determine baseline repeated during and post interventions Staff confidence questionnaires Referral audit Interventions: Ward based role modelling care of the dying (Weekly for 4 months) Ward based teaching sessions Clinical educator would help to relieve staff to attend teaching Attended 2 clinical governance meetings – attended by HoN, matrons, consultants, AHPs Junior doctors very keen and engaged and pharmacist Teaching session for junior doctors, informal teaching when on ward

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6 Audit Proforma Yes No N/A 1. Care supported by the care of the dying person multi-disciplinary documentation 2. Assessment of TA documented in medical notes? 3. Plan of care for management of TA documented in medical notes? 4. Evidence of reassessment & evaluation of interventions in medical notes? 5. Daily assessment and plan of care complete (for all relevant days) for symptom management for nursing care plan (page 22 of CoDP) 6.Daily evaluation completed (for all relevant days) for symptom management nursing care plan (page of CoDP) 7.Overall Score (excellent, good, average, poor) Based on 5 deaths per month L21 Have average 9 deaths per month Baseline March 16-March 17 During intervention April 17-August 17 Post intervention Sept 17-March 18 CoDP= Care of the Dying Person (multi-disciplinary) documentation/care plan

7 Run chart demonstrates statistically significant improvement in the rate of assessment of terminal agitation (p<0.05). Run charts were created with baseline data and on-going data collection during the project Each point = 5 deaths per month 12 data points to gather baseline Re-phasing run charts – new median describes new level of performance Shift is detected – more than 6 data points above the median.

8 Run charts were created with baseline data and on-going data collection during the project
Run charts demonstrated statistically significant improvements in the rate of assessment, reassessment and evaluation of terminal agitation (p<0.05).

9 Run chart demonstrates statistically significant improvement in the rate of re-assessment & evaluation of interventions of terminal agitation (p<0.05). Run charts were created with baseline data and on-going data collection during the project Run charts demonstrated statistically significant improvements in the rate of assessment, reassessment and evaluation of terminal agitation (p<0.05).

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11 Excellent examples of care

12 Excellent examples

13 Intervention bundle for neurosciences (L12, L17, L24 & L25)
Next Steps Intervention bundle for neurosciences (L12, L17, L24 & L25) Ward based role modelling (involving link nurses/clinical educators) Ward based education (involving clinical educators) Medical staff education Juniors education session Clinical governance meetings Discussion of dying patients in safety huddle with a focus on terminal agitation Linking in with clinical educators Plan for band 6 on each ward Meet every 6-8 weeks Ask about

14 Through collaborative working, ward based role modelling and weekly data collection we have demonstrated it is possible to improve the overall management of terminal agitation Linking in with clinical educators Plan for band 6 on each ward Meet every 6-8 weeks Ask about

15 Well done to L21 on improving care for patients towards the end of life
Our palliative care team in Leeds was selected to be part of a national QI collaborative 'Building on the Best (BOTB)' a Quality improvement collaborative aimed at improving the care of patients towards the end of life. On Thursday Dean Royles and the palliative care team presented the L21 team with a certificate congratulating them on making significant positive improvements in the way patients are cared for on the ward. This work will now be scaled up to other wards across neurosciences as a result of its success, supported by the BOTB team. Thanks to all involved for your hard work and improving care for our patients!


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