Hospital Acquired Venous Thromboembolism: A Preventability Assessment
Recommended Citation
Smythe MA, Koerber JM, Roberts A, Hoffman JL, and Batke J. Hospital Acquired Venous Thromboembolism: A Preventability Assessment. Hosp Pharm 2024; 59(2):183-187.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-1-2024
Publication Title
Hospital pharmacy
Abstract
Background: The American Heart Association has a call to action to reduce hospital acquired venous thromboembolism (HA-VTE) by 20% by the year 2030. There is increasing recognition that quality improvement initiatives for VTE reduction should focus on reducing potentially preventable HA-VTE. The objective of our study was to determine what proportion of HA-VTE events are potentially preventable.
Methods: This was a retrospective, single center pilot study of 50 patients with HA-VTE. Seven preventability factors were identified with a focus on VTE prescription and administration. Data were extracted through chart review using a systematic data collection form. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with potentially preventable HA-VTE. Descriptive statistics were used.
Results: The median age was 66 years with an admission VTE risk level of moderate-high in 94%. Potentially preventable HA-VTE was found in 40% of cases. Missed doses occurred in 29.8% with a median of 2 missed doses and a range of 1 to 20. Patient refusal was the most common reason for missed doses in 71%. Delays in initiation occurred in 12.7%. Sixty percent of those on mechanical prophylaxis only had nonadherence.
Conclusion: Forty percent of HA-VTE cases were potentially preventable. Missed doses was the most common preventability factor identified with patient refusal accounting for most missed doses.
PubMed ID
38450351
Volume
59
Issue
2
First Page
183
Last Page
187