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Discharge Practices for Children with Home Mechanical Ventilation across the United States. Key-Informant Perspectives

Sarah A. Sobotka, Ayesha Dholakia, Rishi Agrawal, Jay G. Berry, Maria Brenner, Robert J. Graham, Denise M. Goodman

2020Annals of the American Thoracic Society28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Rationale In 2016, the American Thoracic Society released clinical practice guidelines for pediatric chronic home invasive ventilation pertaining to discharge practices and subsequent management for patients with invasive ventilation using a tracheostomy. It is not known to what extent current U.S. practices adhere to these recommendations. Objectives Hospital discharge practices and home health services are not standardized for children with invasive home mechanical ventilation (HMV). We assessed discharge practices for U.S. children with HMV. Methods A survey of key-informant U.S. clinical providers of children with HMV, identified with purposeful and snowball sampling, was conducted. Topics included medical stability, family caregiver training, and discharge guidelines. Close-ended responses were analyzed using descriptive statistics. Responses to open-ended questions were analyzed using open coding with iterative modification for major theme agreement. Results Eighty-eight responses were received from 157 invitations. Eligible survey responses from 59 providers, representing 44 U.S. states, included 49.2% physicians, 37.3% nurses, 10.2% respiratory therapists, and 3.4% case managers. A minority, 22 (39%) reported that their institution had a standard definition of medical stability; the dominant theme was no ventilator changes 1–2 weeks before discharge. Nearly all respondents’ institutions (94%) required that caregivers demonstrate independent care; the majority (78.4%) required two trained HMV caregivers. Three-fourths described codified discharge guidelines, including the use of a discharge checklist, assurance of home care, and caregiver training. Respondents described variable difficulty with obtaining durable medical equipment, either because of insurance or durable-medical-equipment company barriers. Conclusions This national U.S. survey of providers for HMV highlights heterogeneity in practice realities of discharging pediatric patients with HMV. Although no consensus exists, defining medical stability as no ventilator changes 1–2 weeks before discharge was common, as was having an institutional requirement for training two caregivers. Identification of factors driving heterogeneity, data to inform standards, and barriers to implementation are needed to improve outcomes.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineSnowball samplingRespiratory therapistFamily medicineMechanical ventilationChecklistDescriptive statisticsHealth careNursingPsychologyPsychiatryCognitive psychologyMathematicsEconomic growthEconomicsPathologyStatisticsRespiratory Support and MechanismsFamily and Patient Care in Intensive Care UnitsNeonatal Respiratory Health Research