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Addressing barriers to surgical evaluation for patients with epilepsy

Authors :
John R. Pollard
Jackie Raab
Ammar Kheder
Kathryn A. Davis
Delight Roberts
Chloe E. Hill
Timothy H. Lucas
Brian Litt
Source :
Epilepsy & Behavior. 86:1-5
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2018.

Abstract

Objective Patients with poorly controlled seizures are at elevated risk of epilepsy-related morbidity and mortality. For patients with drug-resistant epilepsy that is focal at onset, epilepsy surgery is the most effective treatment available and offers a 50–80% cure rate. Yet, it is estimated that only 1% of patients with drug-resistant epilepsy undergo surgery in a timely fashion, and delays to surgery completion are considerable. The aim of this study was to increase availability and decrease delay of surgical evaluation at our epilepsy center for patients with drug-resistant epilepsy by removing process barriers. Methods For this quality improvement (QI) initiative, we convened a multidisciplinary team to construct a presurgical pathway process map and complete root cause analysis. This inquiry revealed that the current condition allowed patients to proceed through the pathway without centralized oversight. Therefore, we appointed an epilepsy surgery nurse manager, and under her direction, multiple additional process improvement interventions were applied. We then retrospectively compared preintervention (2014–2015) and postintervention (2016–2017) cohorts of patient undergoing the presurgical pathway. The improvement measures were patient throughput and pathway sojourn times. As a balancing measure, we considered the proportion of potentially eligible patients (epilepsy monitoring unit (EMU) admissions) who ultimately completed epilepsy surgery. Results Following our intervention, patient throughput was substantially increased for each stage of the presurgical pathway (32%–96% growth). However, patient sojourn times were not improved overall. No difference was observed in the proportion of possible candidates who ultimately completed epilepsy surgery. Significance Although process improvement expanded the number of patients who underwent epilepsy surgical evaluation, we experienced concurrent prolongation of the time from pathway initiation to completion. Ongoing improvement cycles will focus on newly identified residual sources of bottleneck and delay.

Details

ISSN :
15255050
Volume :
86
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Epilepsy & Behavior
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5e46fc2685eb7d80247341c775f3d560