ACEi/ARB for systolic heart failure: Closing the quality gap with a sustainable intervention at an academic medical center.

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ACEi/ARB for systolic heart failure: Closing the quality gap with a sustainable intervention at an academic medical center.

J Hosp Med. 2010 Jul 22;

Authors: Qian Q, Manning DM, Ou N, Klarich MJ, Leutink DJ, Loth AR, Lopez-Jimenez F

BACKGROUND:: National guidelines recommend angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEi) or angiotensinogen receptor blocker (ARB) therapy for patients with left ventricular systolic dysfunction (LVSD), including those with symptomatic heart failure (HF). However, guideline adherence has not been optimal. The goal of this quality improvement project is to devise and implement a sustainable care-delivery model in a 920-bed academic hospital center that would improve ACEi/ARB adherence before hospital discharge. METHODS:: The Model of intervention is: (1) a computer-based daily screening program; (2) inpatient pharmacist e-flag message; and (3) alerts for inpatient care teams. Its operating algorithm: If eligible adult HF/LVSD inpatients are not on ACEi or ARB nor documentation of contraindications, a flag alert is generated; deficiency is confirmed by a pharmacist and conveyed to the patient-care teams; if alert is acted on and care brought into adherence, the screening program would not re-flag the same patients the succeeding day; if not, the patients would be re-flagged daily until reaching adherence. We compared ACEi/ARB adherence before, during, and after the intervention. RESULTS:: Baseline performance (percentage of eligible HF/LVSD patients receiving ACEi/ARB) was 87.5%. After implementation of the Model the ACEi/ARB adherence rate at the time of hospital discharge rose to 96.7% (P < 0.002) and was sustained for 21 months without needing additional personnel. CONCLUSIONS:: A carefully designed, computer-based care-delivery model is highly efficient and sustainable for enhancing ACEi/ARB adherence. Journal of Hospital Medicine 2010. (c) 2010 Society of Hospital Medicine.

PMID: 20652962 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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