Improving Practice for Urinary Continence Care on Adult Acute Medical and Rehabilitation Wards: A Multi-Site, Co-Created Implementation Study
Many adult inpatients experience urinary continence issues; however, we lack evidence on effective interventions for inpatient continence care. We conducted a before and after implementation study. We implemented our guideline-based intervention using strategies targeting identified barriers and eva...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Healthcare (Basel) 2023-04, Vol.11 (9), p.1241 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Many adult inpatients experience urinary continence issues; however, we lack evidence on effective interventions for inpatient continence care. We conducted a before and after implementation study. We implemented our guideline-based intervention using strategies targeting identified barriers and evaluated the impact on urinary continence care provided by inpatient clinicians. Fifteen wards (acute = 3, rehabilitation = 7, acute and rehabilitation = 5) at 12 hospitals (metropolitan = 4, regional = 8) participated. We screened 2298 consecutive adult medical records for evidence of urinary continence symptoms over three 3-month periods: before implementation (T
: n = 849), after the 6-month implementation period (T
: n = 740), and after a 6-month maintenance period (T
: n = 709). The records of symptomatic inpatients were audited for continence assessment, diagnosis, and management plans. All wards contributed data at T
, and 11/15 wards contributed at T
and T
(dropouts due to COVID-19). Approximately 26% of stroke, 33% acute medical, and 50% of rehabilitation inpatients were symptomatic. The proportions of symptomatic patients (T
: n = 283, T
: n = 241, T
: n = 256) receiving recommended care were: assessment T
= 38%, T
= 63%, T
= 68%; diagnosis T
= 30%, T
= 70%, T
= 71%; management plan T
= 7%, T
= 24%, T
= 24%. Overall, there were 4-fold increased odds for receiving assessments and management plans and 6-fold greater odds for diagnosis. These improvements were sustained at T
. This intervention has improved inpatient continence care. |
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ISSN: | 2227-9032 2227-9032 |
DOI: | 10.3390/healthcare11091241 |