BRR

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BRR/XBR is an entry we use to identify whether patients are receiving therapeutic hypothermia following a cardiac arrest. By identifying all patients that receive this therapy a further audit can be done to identify if therapy was appropriate or not. We do not track cooling for reasons other than cardiac arrest.

Guidelines / Collection Instructions

For any ICU patient with one of the following diagnoses:

code in TMP follows:

  • Project: Cooling
  • item
    • BRR (BRR stands for "Brrrr" as in shivering or cold)
      • cooling protocol was applied >= 12 hrs (unless patient died before)
      • cooled for >= 12 hrs prior to arrival to your ICU
    • XBR - no cooling protocol applied, or applied for < 12hrs
    • Do not code BRR or XBR when a cooling protocol is used to normalize temperature for any type of non-cardiac arrest patients.

We want to capture all patients who are cooled post cardiac arrest whether they meet criteria or not. A significant portion of patients following cardiac arrest do not meet ALL the criteria listed in this article however, based on the available evidence it is reasonable to consider cooling them.

Context: Cardiac Arrest Cooling Protocol

Target temp: 32°C to 34°C for 12 to 24 hours (but see above for our collection threshold).

Taken from the Hypothermia Protocol - Criteria:

  • Cooling is indicated if all of the following are checked:
    • Cardiac Arrest
    • Initial rhythm ventricular fibrillation/tachycardia(Dx code: 131-4, or 131-1)
    • Time to ACLS <15 minutes
    • Total ACLS time <60 minutes
    • Persistent Glasgow Coma Scale < or = 9
    • Systolic BP currently over 90 mmHg (pressors allowed)
    • < 8 hours elapsed since Return of Spontaneous Circulation (ROSC)

Template:CCMDB Data Integrity Checks

see Check BRR/XBR vs cardiac arrest dx

Background

Start Dates

  • collection was started August 2004
  • XBR and CCMDB.mdb cross checks were added to detect occasions where entry was just forgotten/missed March 19.09
  • reviewed with Kendiss Olafson and Dean Bell.--TOstryzniuk 17:58, 26 August 2009 (CDT)
  • cross-checks changed to include Unwitnessed Cardiac Arrest August 27.09
  • moved from ICU Var 2 into TMP on Dec 18, 2014

Why the code XBR?

The rationale for the code XBR is to identify those patients who had a cardiac arrest but were not cooled regardless if they met criteria for cooling or not. XBR was implemented after an audit of cardiac arrest was done and it was found that there were several cardiac arrests coded that were missing code BRR. By leaving Variable 2 blank for a cardiac arrest, it is not clear to Kendiss or Julie whether a data collector missed tagging it or if indeed cooling was not applied. Coding XBR indicates to both Kendiss and Julie that a collector verfied that the cooling protocol was not applied.

Should this be an ongoing collection?

"...As you can see it is a challenge to keep criteria straight for even this one project here. The question needs to be asked of the Critical Care Quality Improvement team, Kendiss Olafson & Dave Easton (chairman) if BRR and XBR really needs to be collected indefinitely or if it can be done as an intermittent audit. I will pose the question to Dave and Kendiss and/or raise it at next Steering Committee meeting.

  • June 19.12 - Email sent to QI Team (Olafson & Easton), Critical Care Directors HSC (Paunavic, Tweed, Garland)as to above.Trish Ostryzniuk 12:48, 2012 June 19 (CDT)
    • Response from: Kendiss Olfson & Dave Easton who is the Chairman of CCQI committee - they will be meeting in August 2012 and let us know the status of this. Continue collecting until we hear back.Trish Ostryzniuk 14:22, 2012 June 22 (CDT)