Reducing Sedative-Hypnotics Among Hospitalized Patients: a Multi-centered Study

Background Sedative-hypnotics are frequently prescribed for insomnia in hospital but are associated with preventable harms. Objective, Design, and Participants We aimed to examine whether a sedative-hypnotic reduction quality improvement bundle decreases the rate of sedative-hypnotic use among hospitalized patients, who were previously naïve to sedative-hypnotics. This interrupted time series study occurred between May 2016 and January 2019. Control data for 1 year prior to implementation and intervention data for at least 16 months were collected. The study occurred on 7 inpatient wards (general medicine, cardiology, nephrology, general surgery, and cardiovascular surgery wards) across 5 teaching hospitals in Toronto, Canada. Intervention Participating wards implemented a sedative-hypnotic reduction bundle (i.e., order set changes, audit-feedback, pharmacist-enabled medication reviews, sleep hygiene, daily sleep huddles, and staff/patient/family education) aimed to reduce in-hospital sedative-hypnotic initiation for insomnia in patients who were previously naïve to sedative-hypnotics. Each inpatient ward adapted the bundle prior to sustaining the intervention for a minimum of 16 months. Main Measures The primary outcome measure was the proportion of sedative-hypnotic-naïve inpatients newly prescribed a sedative-hypnotic for sleep in hospital. Secondary measures include prescribing rates of other sedating medications, fall rates, length of stay, and mortality. Key Results We included 8,970 patient discharges in the control period and 10,120 in the intervention period. Adjusted sedative-hypnotic prescriptions among naïve patients decreased from 15.48% (95% CI: 6.09–19.42) to 9.08% (p<0.001) (adjusted OR 0.814; 95% CI: 0.667–0.993, p=0.042). Unchanged secondary outcomes included mortality (adjusted OR 1.089; 95% CI: 0.786–1.508, p=0.608), falls (adjusted rate ratio 0.819; 95% CI: 0.625–1.073, p=0.148), or other sedating drug prescriptions (adjusted OR 1.046; 95% CI: 0.873–1.252, p=0.627). Conclusions A sedative-hypnotic reduction quality improvement bundle implemented across 5 hospitals was associated with a sustained reduction in sedative-hypnotic prescriptions..

Medienart:

E-Artikel

Erscheinungsjahr:

2022

Erschienen:

2022

Enthalten in:

Zur Gesamtaufnahme - volume:37

Enthalten in:

Journal of general internal medicine - 37(2022), 10 vom: 03. Jan., Seite 2345-2350

Sprache:

Englisch

Beteiligte Personen:

Soong, Christine [VerfasserIn]
Ethier, Cheryl [VerfasserIn]
Lee, Yuna [VerfasserIn]
Othman, Dalia [VerfasserIn]
Burry, Lisa [VerfasserIn]
Wu, Peter E. [VerfasserIn]
Ng, Karen A. [VerfasserIn]
Matelski, John [VerfasserIn]
Liu, Barbara [VerfasserIn]

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Anmerkungen:

© The Author(s) under exclusive licence to Society of General Internal Medicine 2021

doi:

10.1007/s11606-021-07292-5

funding:

Förderinstitution / Projekttitel:

PPN (Katalog-ID):

OLC2131610793