Enhancing blood pressure management protocol implementation in patients with acute intracerebral haemorrhage through a nursing-led approach: A retrospective cohort study

Olalla Pancorbo, Estela Sanjuan, María Teresa Rodríguez-Samaniego, Olga Miñarro, Renato Simonetti, Marta Olivé-Gadea, Álvaro García-Tornel, Noelia Rodriguez-Villatoro, Marián Muchada, Marta Rubiera, José Álvarez-Sabin, Carlos A. Molina, David Rodriguez-Luna

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Aim: To evaluate the impact of nurse care changes in implementing a blood pressure management protocol on achieving rapid, intensive and sustained blood pressure reduction in acute intracerebral haemorrhage patients. Design: Retrospective cohort study of prospectively collected data over 6 years. Methods: Intracerebral haemorrhage patients within 6 h and systolic blood pressure ≥ 150 mmHg followed a rapid (starting treatment at computed tomography suite with a target achievement goal of ≤60 min), intensive (target systolic blood pressure < 140 mmHg) and sustained (maintaining target stability for 24 h) blood pressure management plan. We differentiated six periods: P1, stroke nurse at computed tomography suite (baseline period); P2, antihypertensive titration by stroke nurse; P3, retraining by neurologists; P4, integration of a stroke advanced practice nurse; P5, after COVID-19 impact; and P6, retraining by stroke advanced practice nurse. Outcomes included first-hour target achievement (primary outcome), tomography-to-treatment and treatment-to-target times, first-hour maximum dose of antihypertensive treatment and 6-h and 24-h systolic blood pressure variability. Results: Compared to P1, antihypertensive titration by stroke nurses (P2) reduced treatment-to-target time and increased the rate of first-hour target achievement, retraining of stroke nurses by neurologists (P3) maintained a higher rate of first-hour target achievement and the integration of a stroke advanced practice nurse (P4) reduced both 6-h and 24-h systolic blood pressure variability. However, 6-h systolic blood pressure variability increased from P4 to P5 following the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Finally, compared to P1, retraining of stroke nurses by stroke advanced practice nurse (P6) reduced tomography-to-treatment time and increased the first-hour maximum dose of antihypertensive treatment. Conclusion: Changes in nursing care and continuous education can significantly enhance the time metrics and blood pressure outcomes in acute intracerebral haemorrhage patients. Reporting Method: STROBE guidelines. Patient and Public Contribution: No Patient or Public Contribution.

Idioma originalAnglès
Pàgines (de-a)1398-1408
Nombre de pàgines11
RevistaJournal of Clinical Nursing
Volum33
Número4
DOIs
Estat de la publicacióPublicada - d’abr. 2024
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