A QIP aimed at improving the recording of patients with discharge bodyweight of heart failure in the acute cardiac unit

Introduction: Diuretic therapy has an important role in the management of fluid overload in patients with decompensated heart failure (HF). Further to this, having a previous dry weight available aids cardiologists and community heart failure nurses in optimising diuretic therapy during readmissions...

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Main Authors: Minesh Patel, Chie Katsura
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-06-01
Series:Future Healthcare Journal
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2514664525001444
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author Minesh Patel
Chie Katsura
author_facet Minesh Patel
Chie Katsura
author_sort Minesh Patel
collection DOAJ
description Introduction: Diuretic therapy has an important role in the management of fluid overload in patients with decompensated heart failure (HF). Further to this, having a previous dry weight available aids cardiologists and community heart failure nurses in optimising diuretic therapy during readmissions and in their HF follow-up in the community. This information was not readily available on the computer systems at the acute cardiac unit (ACU). Therefore, a project was devised with an aim to record the dry weights of patients in discharge letters to promote awareness and reporting. This project was supervised by a consultant cardiologist and the hospital’s heart failure nurse was involved. A baseline audit had shown that only eight discharge letters out of 85 (9.4%) for patients with HF included a dry body weight. Material and methods: Two interventions were implemented to promote the reporting of dry weights in discharge letters. The first (plan–do–study–act (PDSA) 1) was to draft and distribute a cardiology induction handbook with an excerpt highlighting the need for dry weight recording in discharge letters for newly rotating resident doctors in the ACU in December. The second intervention (PDSA 2) consisted of an in-person presentation to the newly rotating resident doctors in April. All discharge letters for patients with HF were examined for compliance throughout the duration of the project. Results and discussion: Following PSDA 1, 25% of discharge letters included a dry body weight. Subsequently, in the period after PDSA 2, this increased to 38%. In all, there was an overall improvement in reporting. Conclusion: To conclude, we report that the proportion of discharge letters with recorded dry body weights had risen to above 35% following our quality improvement project. Overall, the community HF nurses found this work useful in the follow-up of their patients. Additional methods of distributing dry bodyweights in patients with HF could be to include these in clinic letters in the future.
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spelling doaj-art-14b51d56d7d14de382dd0f74a6539b3d2025-07-26T05:23:40ZengElsevierFuture Healthcare Journal2514-66452025-06-01122100365A QIP aimed at improving the recording of patients with discharge bodyweight of heart failure in the acute cardiac unitMinesh Patel0Chie Katsura1East Suffolk and North Essex NHS TrustEast Suffolk and North Essex NHS TrustIntroduction: Diuretic therapy has an important role in the management of fluid overload in patients with decompensated heart failure (HF). Further to this, having a previous dry weight available aids cardiologists and community heart failure nurses in optimising diuretic therapy during readmissions and in their HF follow-up in the community. This information was not readily available on the computer systems at the acute cardiac unit (ACU). Therefore, a project was devised with an aim to record the dry weights of patients in discharge letters to promote awareness and reporting. This project was supervised by a consultant cardiologist and the hospital’s heart failure nurse was involved. A baseline audit had shown that only eight discharge letters out of 85 (9.4%) for patients with HF included a dry body weight. Material and methods: Two interventions were implemented to promote the reporting of dry weights in discharge letters. The first (plan–do–study–act (PDSA) 1) was to draft and distribute a cardiology induction handbook with an excerpt highlighting the need for dry weight recording in discharge letters for newly rotating resident doctors in the ACU in December. The second intervention (PDSA 2) consisted of an in-person presentation to the newly rotating resident doctors in April. All discharge letters for patients with HF were examined for compliance throughout the duration of the project. Results and discussion: Following PSDA 1, 25% of discharge letters included a dry body weight. Subsequently, in the period after PDSA 2, this increased to 38%. In all, there was an overall improvement in reporting. Conclusion: To conclude, we report that the proportion of discharge letters with recorded dry body weights had risen to above 35% following our quality improvement project. Overall, the community HF nurses found this work useful in the follow-up of their patients. Additional methods of distributing dry bodyweights in patients with HF could be to include these in clinic letters in the future.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2514664525001444
spellingShingle Minesh Patel
Chie Katsura
A QIP aimed at improving the recording of patients with discharge bodyweight of heart failure in the acute cardiac unit
Future Healthcare Journal
title A QIP aimed at improving the recording of patients with discharge bodyweight of heart failure in the acute cardiac unit
title_full A QIP aimed at improving the recording of patients with discharge bodyweight of heart failure in the acute cardiac unit
title_fullStr A QIP aimed at improving the recording of patients with discharge bodyweight of heart failure in the acute cardiac unit
title_full_unstemmed A QIP aimed at improving the recording of patients with discharge bodyweight of heart failure in the acute cardiac unit
title_short A QIP aimed at improving the recording of patients with discharge bodyweight of heart failure in the acute cardiac unit
title_sort qip aimed at improving the recording of patients with discharge bodyweight of heart failure in the acute cardiac unit
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2514664525001444
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