A patient journey audit tool (PJAT) to assess quality indicators in a nuclear medicine service.

Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging

Department of Molecular Imaging and Therapy, Austin Health, Level 1, Harold Stokes Building, Studley Road, Melbourne, Victoria, 3084, Australia.

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • A special tool called the Patient Journey Audit Tool (PJAT) was created to make sure patients in nuclear medicine get the best care possible.
  • The PJAT has 32 questions to check if the department is following health and safety rules, including patient safety and infection control.
  • After auditing 180 patient journeys, the results showed over 85% compliance with health standards, with perfect scores on very important safety checks.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To develop a nuclear medicine specific patient journey audit tool (PJAT) to survey and audit patient journeys in a nuclear medicine department such as staff interaction with patients, equipment, quality of imaging and laboratory procedures, patient protection, infection control and radiation safety, with a view to optimising patient care and providing a high-quality nuclear medicine service.

Methods: The PJAT was developed specifically for use in nuclear medicine practices. Thirty-two questions were formulated in the PJAT to test the department's compliance to the Australian National Safety and Quality Health Service Standards, namely clinical governance, partnering with consumers, preventing and controlling health care infection, medication safety, comprehensive care, communicating for safety, blood management and recognising and responding to acute deterioration. The PJAT was also designed to test our department's adherence to diagnostic reference levels (DRL). A total of 60 patient journey audits were completed for patients presenting for nuclear medicine, positron emission tomography and bone mineral density procedures during a consecutive 4-week period to audit the range of procedures performed. A further 120 audits were captured for common procedures in nuclear medicine and positron emission tomography during the same period. Thus, a total of 180 audits were completed. A subset of 12 patients who presented for blood labelling procedures were audited to solely assess the blood management standard.

Results: The audits demonstrated over 85% compliance for the Australian national health standards. One hundred percent compliance was noted for critical aspects such as correct patient identification for the correct procedure prior to radiopharmaceutical administration, adherence to prescribed dose limits and distribution of the report within 24 h of completion of the imaging procedure.

Conclusion: This PJAT can be applied in nuclear medicine departments to enhance quality programmes and patient care. Austin Health has collaborated with the IAEA to formulate the IAEA PJAT, which is now available globally for nuclear medicine departments to survey patient journeys.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11139729PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00259-024-06627-8DOI Listing

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