Author: Matthia, Eldon L; Mohadjer, Ashley; Randall, Morgan H; Canha, Catarina; Warren, Elizabeth; Ashraf, Hassan M; Plasschaert, Jeffrey M; Winchester, David E; Keeley, Ellen C
Title: Promoting Cardiac Rehabilitation in Acute Coronary Syndrome Patients: Quality Initiative Based on Education, Automated Referral and Multi-disciplinary Rounds. Cord-id: t68l029x Document date: 2021_7_7
ID: t68l029x
Snippet: Cardiac rehabilitation is a class 1 recommendation for acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients according to the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association. However, only 1 in 5 ACS patients are referred for cardiac rehabilitation nationally, and even fewer at our institution. We sought to improve the number of referrals to cardiac rehabilitation for post-ACS patients admitted to our inpatient cardiology service, and ultimately their participation in the program. We designed a quali
Document: Cardiac rehabilitation is a class 1 recommendation for acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients according to the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association. However, only 1 in 5 ACS patients are referred for cardiac rehabilitation nationally, and even fewer at our institution. We sought to improve the number of referrals to cardiac rehabilitation for post-ACS patients admitted to our inpatient cardiology service, and ultimately their participation in the program. We designed a quality improvement initiative that included education of patients and housestaff, automated referral order, and participation of cardiac rehabilitation staff members on multidisciplinary rounds. We compared the number of patients who received a referral to cardiac rehabilitation, had the first appointment scheduled prior to hospital discharge, and attended the program before and after our intervention. Six months after initiation of the project, the proportion of ACS patients referred to cardiac rehabilitation prior to hospital discharge increased from 10% to 43% (p <0.001). The mean number of patients with a cardiac rehabilitation appointment scheduled prior to discharge was 2 before and 5 after the intervention (p<0.001), and the mean number of patients who attended their scheduled appointment was 1 before and 3 after the intervention (p=0.001). Run charts demonstrated that the number of referrals and number of scheduled appointments remained above the median following the intervention. In conclusion, an initiative that included education, automated referrals, and direct one-on-one contact with cardiac rehabilitation staff prior to discharge increased the number of cardiac rehabilitation referrals, and appointments scheduled and attended in post-ACS patients.
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