Stockport Express

Computer kidney alert will help to save lives HELEN JOHNSON

- Helen.johnson@menmedia.co.uk @helenj83ME­N

ACOMPUTER alert system is helping healthcare teams provide faster and better care for acute kidney injury patients at Stepping Hill Hospital.

The IT alert system, the only one of its kind in Greater Manchester, will help save local lives by ensuring patients get specialist care and treatment as soon as they arrive at hospital to prevent them from developing chronic kidney disease.

It is estimated that one in five patients taken into hospital for an emergency arrives with an acute kidney injury.

In the UK around 100,000 deaths each year are associated with acute kidney injuries, and up to 30 per cent of these could be prevented if a patient is given the right treatment.

Wendy Oakes joined Stepping Hill Hospital last March, working as a specialist nurse for acute kidney injury.

She is working with Dr Karl Bonnici, clinical director for acute medicine, to raise awareness about the condition with staff and provide new care plans and guidance for these patients.

When a patient comes to A&E, a blood test is taken which determines whether a patient has an acute kidney injury.

When the doctor or nurse updates the patient’s electronic record the IT system then sends an immediate colourcode­d alert about the patient to the computer screens where doctors and nurses first view lists of patients.

This informatio­n is particular­ly useful in the fastmoving environmen­t of A&E, acute medical and surgical assessment units.

The alert system helps highlight the diagnosis of acute kidney injury.

Earlier recognitio­n and timely interventi­on is fundamenta­l in reducing the possible complicati­ons associated with acute kidney injury. Since the system and care plan was introduced six months ago, very strong improvemen­ts have been made in the care patients receive.

Wendy said: “The prevention and management of acute kidney injury is not rocket science. It’s about getting the basics right, especially in the first 24 hours.

“The new alert system, together with the new care plan, will really help ensure patients get the treatment they need as soon as they possibly can.

“If we continue to improve the care we deliver, over the long term this will have a positive effect on patient outcomes, and in some cases save lives.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ●●Stepping Hill’s Wendy Oakes and Dr Karl Bonnici are working to help implement the new system
●●Stepping Hill’s Wendy Oakes and Dr Karl Bonnici are working to help implement the new system

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom