RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 A multifaceted intervention to improve sepsis management in general hospital wards with evaluation using segmented regression of interrupted time series JF BMJ Quality & Safety JO BMJ Qual Saf FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd SP e2 OP e2 DO 10.1136/bmjqs-2013-002176 VO 23 IS 12 A1 Marwick, Charis A A1 Guthrie, Bruce A1 Pringle, Jan E C A1 Evans, Josie M M A1 Nathwani, Dilip A1 Donnan, Peter T A1 Davey, Peter G YR 2014 UL http://qualitysafety.bmj.com/content/23/12/e2.abstract AB Problem Antibiotic administration to inpatients developing sepsis in general hospital wards was frequently delayed. We aimed to reproduce improvements in sepsis management reported in other settings. Context Ninewells Hospital, an 860-bed teaching hospital with quality improvement (QI) experience, in Scotland, UK. The intervention wards were 22 medical, surgical and orthopaedic inpatient wards. Design A multifaceted intervention, informed by baseline process data and questionnaires and interviews with junior doctors, evaluated using segmented regression analysis of interrupted time series (ITS) data. Measures for improvement Primary outcome measure: antibiotic administration within 4 hours of sepsis onset. Secondary measures: antibiotics within 8 hours; mean and median time to antibiotics; medical review within 30 min for patients with a standardised early warning system score ≥4; blood cultures taken before antibiotic administration; blood lactate level measured. Strategies for change The intervention included printed and electronic clinical guidance, educational clinical team meetings including baseline performance data, audit and monthly feedback on performance. Effects of change Performance against all study outcome measures improved postintervention but differences were small and ITS analysis did not attribute the observed changes to the intervention. Lessons learnt Rigorous analysis of this carefully designed improvement intervention could not confirm significant effects. Statistical analysis of many such studies is inadequate, and there is insufficient reporting of negative studies. In light of recent evidence, involving senior clinical team members in verbal feedback and action planning may have made the intervention more effective. Our focus on rigorous intervention design and evaluation was at the expense of iterative refinement, which likely reduced the effect. This highlights the necessary, but challenging, requirement to invest in all three components for effective QI.