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Educational outreach visits to improve nurses' use of mechanical venous thromboembolism prevention in hospitalized medical patients
Duff, Jed ; Walker, Kim ; Abdulla, Omari ; Middleton, Sandy ; McInnes, Elizabeth
Duff, Jed
Walker, Kim
Abdulla, Omari
Middleton, Sandy
McInnes, Elizabeth
Abstract
Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in hospitalized medical patients. Evidence-based guidelines exist for preventing VTE; unfortunately, these guidelines are not always adhered to by clinicians. The aim of this study was to evaluate the acceptability, utility and clinical impact of an educational outreach visit (EOV) on nurses' provision of mechanical prophylaxis to hospitalized medical patients using a prospective, uncontrolled, before-and-after design. Nurses received a 1-to-1 educational session on mechanical VTE prevention by a trained nurse facilitator. The EOV intervention was designed by a multidisciplinary group of healthcare professionals using social marketing theory. Eighty-five of the 120 eligible nurses (71%) attended the EOV. The median length of each visit was 11.5 minutes (interquartile range [IQR], 10–15) and the median time spent arranging and conducting each visit was 63 minutes (IQR, 49–85). Eighty-four (99%) of the 85 participants gave a verbal commitment to trial the new evidence-based mechanical VTE prevention practices. However, there were no measurable improvements in the proportion of patients risk assessed (–1.7% improvement; 95% confidence interval [CI], –7.0 to 10.3; P = .68) or provided appropriate mechanical prophylaxis (−0.3% improvement; 95% CI, −13.4 to 14; P = .96). Researchers conclude that EOV should not be used to improve nurses’ use of mechanical VTE prevention because it has no measurable impact on clinical practice and is resource intensive, requiring 4.5 minutes of preparation for every minute spent face to face with participants. Further research into the specific mechanism of action is required to explain the variability in clinical effect seen with this intervention.
Keywords
Date
2013
Type
Journal article
Journal
Journal of Vascular Nursing
Book
Volume
31
Issue
4
Page Range
139-149
Article Number
ACU Department
Nursing Research Institute
Faculty of Health Sciences
Faculty of Health Sciences
Collections
Relation URI
Source URL
Event URL
Open Access Status
Published as green open access
License
File Access
Controlled
Open
Open
