A clinical practice improvement project on inappropriate intravenous phosphate replacement
Introduction
Our hospital’s reference range for phosphate is 0.85–1.45 mmol/L. Oral replacement is generally adequate for mild and moderate hypophosphataemia >0.3 mmol/L).1,2 Intravenous (IV) phosphate replacement carries many potential side effects and is therefore given for severe hypophosphataemia (<0.3 mmol/L) only.1,2 Inappropriate IV phosphate replacement was common in our ward. We carried out a clinical practice improvement project (CPIP) to address this problem.
Materials and methods
We retrospectively reviewed the clinical record of all patients with hypophosphataemia admitted to two of our medical wards (total 68 beds) from February to April 2019. 350 hypophosphataemia results were reviewed. They were analysed in blocks of two weeks.
A median of 66% of hypophosphataemia cases with phosphate >0.3 mmol/L were inappropriately given IV phosphate (Fig 1). A previous study reported a prevalence of 85% in an American hospital.3
We formed a team of six members consisting of two pharmacists, three internists and one nurse. A flow chart to describe the process of hypophosphataemia management and a fishbone diagram were constructed.
After two rounds of multi-voting, our Pareto chart showed the top three root causes to address were:
inadequate published guidance on hypophosphataemia management
mindset of rapidly correcting laboratory abnormalities
unfamiliarity with ‘oral fleet’ phosphate solution.
Two interventions were devised:
A poster (rolled out on 29 July 2019) providing guidance on hypophosphataemia management and educating doctors and nurses about ‘oral fleet’ (sodium phosphate solution), as oral phosphate replacement as phosphate tablet is not available in our hospital.
A plenary session (conducted on 20 August 2019) educating doctors and pharmacists about the rationale and scientific basis of our hypophosphataemia guideline, with the aim of changing their mindset of using IV phosphate for rapid correction. Concerns on medication safety, cost and time saving were shared.
We applied plan, do, study, act (PDSA) methodology.
Results and discussion
With the two interventions implemented, the percentage of inappropriate IV phosphate replacement dropped to 3.7% (Fig 1). Estimated cost saved per year is about 20,000 GBP. There are other benefits such as nurses’ time saved, improved patient comfort and lower risk of medication error.
To ensure sustainability, we propose to
raise the awareness of hypophosphataemia guideline by introducing it during orientation
repeat the education talk every 6 months
set up online module on hypophosphataemia
upload hypophosphataemia guidelines to the intranet
encourage nurses to speak up and discuss concerns with doctors about potential inappropriate IV phosphate replacement.
Conclusion
We have successfully carried out a CPIP to reduce the percentage of inappropriate IV phosphate replacement in our medical wards from 66% to 3.7% within 6 months.
Conflicts of interest
None declared.
- © Royal College of Physicians 2020. All rights reserved.
References
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- Royal Cornwall Hospitals NHS Trust.
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- Ledere E
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- Hemstreet BA
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