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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Use of a guideline based questionnaire to audit hospital care of acute asthma.

Derek Bell, +2 more
- 15 Jun 1991 - 
- Vol. 302, Iss: 6790, pp 1440-1443
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TLDR
An audit questionnaire developed from hospital guidelines on management of acute asthma improved few standards of care and emphasises the need for further reinforcement and feedback.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES--To design an audit questionnaire and pilot its use by an audit assistant to monitor inpatient management of acute asthma and to compare the care given by chest physicians and general physicians. DESIGN--Retrospective review by a chest physician and audit assistant of a random sample of 76 case records of patients by a criterion based questionnaire developed from hospital guidelines on management of acute asthma. SETTING--One district general hospital. PATIENTS--76 adult patients with acute asthma: 38 admitted with a relevant primary diagnosis between April 1988 and March 1989 and a further 38 admitted through the accident and emergency department between April 1989 and March 1990. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES--Conformity with recognised standards for assessment and management of acute asthma before and after the audit and by chest physicians and general physicians. RESULTS--Age and sex did not differ significantly between the different groups of patients. Overall, deviations from the guidelines occurred in recording measures of severity of asthma, emergency treatment with beta 2 agonists (60/76, 79%) and steroids (43/76, 57%), and prescription of antibiotics in accordance with at least one criterion of the guidelines (29/45, 64%). Chest physicians were more rigorous than general physicians in recording severity measures, especially serum potassium concentration (chi 2 = 3.6, df = 1, p = 0.06), emergency steroid treatment within the correct period (chi 2 = 3.9, df = 1, p = 0.05), and referral for follow up at an outpatient chest clinic. Recording of arterial blood gas tensions improved significantly between the 1988-9 and 1989-90 samples (chi 2 = 7.0, df = 1, p = 0.08). CONCLUSIONS--The questionnaire proved easy to use for both doctor and audit assistant. The audit improved few standards of care and emphasises the need for further reinforcement and feedback.

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Citations
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National asthma attack audit 1991-2. General Practitioners in Asthma Group.

TL;DR: Reported management of asthma attacks in the United Kingdom was at variance with recommended guidelines, having major implications for the design and distribution of future guidelines.
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Adherence to asthma guidelines in general practices.

TL;DR: There was no significant association found between appropriate asthma medication and asthma clinic attendance or other patient characteristics, and the need to document the utility of clinical practice guidelines which may improve physician compliance is underscored.
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Evaluation of medical audit.

TL;DR: To review current knowledge of the effectiveness of medical audit programmes as a whole and of specific interventions within these programmes, as a means of changing clinical behaviour, and to define the local factors which influence results.
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How general practitioners manage acute asthma attacks.

TL;DR: Some aspects of the management of asthma attacks by general practitioners has changed in line with guidelines, but there is still a large gap between actual and recommended management.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Assessment and management of severe asthma

TL;DR: Clinical and functional features shown by fifty-eight patients during seventy-six admissions to the hospital with severe asthma are reported, including bronchodilators, antimicrobial chemotherapy and large doses of corticosteroids, and there was only one hospital death.
Journal ArticleDOI

Differences in hospital asthma management.

TL;DR: The data suggest that the intensive management of asthmatic patients, practised in respiratory units, prevents much unnecessary morbidity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessment and management of asthma in an accident and emergency department.

TL;DR: Although there was no specific evidence of inappropriate admission to or discharge from hospital in this retrospective study, the failure to record more objective measurements of the severity of asthma and, in particular, the extent of the airflow obstruction, is cause for concern.
Journal ArticleDOI

An assessment of the adequacy of self-care by adult asthmatics

TL;DR: If physicians and other health care providers could decrease the frequency of these inappropriate self-care behaviors, it could result in improved health.
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