Barbara Maxwell’s research while affiliated with Belfast Health and Social Care Trust and other places

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Publications (8)


Asthma
  • Chapter

September 2023

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5 Reads

Barbara Maxwell

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Gillian Gallagher

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Katie McMullan

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Catherine Russell

The final SADCP summary algorithm.
Before and after Box plots with individual patients linked by solid lines. On the y-axis are number of OoH visits (A), number of courses OCS (B), number of ED visits (C) and number of admissions (D). The center horizontal line in the box is the median, the upper horizontal box lines are the quartiles and dots above the upper whisker represent individual outliers.
Changes made during the nurse led training sessions at the RBHSC.
Implementation of a Children's Safe Asthma Discharge Care Pathway Reduces the Risk of Future Asthma Attacks in Children–A Retrospective Quality Improvement Report
  • Article
  • Full-text available

March 2022

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81 Reads

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3 Citations

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Gillian Gallagher

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Barbara Maxwell

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[...]

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Background Many children attend Emergency Departments (ED) and Out of Hours (OoH) frequently for acute asthma. Follow up care is often suboptimal leaving these children at risk of a future attacks. We report on the development, implementation and evaluation of a safe asthma discharge care pathway (SADCP). Methods This is a retrospective report on the development, implementation and evaluation of outcomes of a SADCP. The pathway was based on the Teach-to-goal educational methodology that supported the mastery correct inhaler technique and ability to action the personalized asthma action plan (PAAP). Children with frequent asthma attacks were entered as they were discharged from the Emergency Department or ward. The first training session occurred within 1–3 weeks of the index asthma attack with 2 further sessions in the following 8 weeks. Children exiting the pathway were discharged either back to primary care or to a hospital clinic. Results 81 children entered the pathway (median age 5 years) with 72 discharged from the ED and 9 from the medical wards of the Royal Belfast Hospital for Sick Children. At pathway entry 13% had correct inhaler technique, 10% had a Personalized Asthma Action Plan (PAAP), and 5% had >80% (45% >50%) repeat refill evidence of adherence to inhaled corticosteroid over the previous 12 months. On pathway exit all children demonstrated correct inhaler technique and were able to action their PAAP. One year later 51% and 95% had refill evidence of >80% and >50% adherence. Comparisons of the 12 months before and 12 months after exit from the pathway the median number of emergency ED or OoH asthma attendances and courses of oral corticosteroids reduced to zero with >75% having no attacks requiring this level of attention. Similar findings resulted when the SADCP was implemented in a district general hospital pediatric unit. Conclusion Implementing an asthma care pathway, using Teach-to-Goal skill training methods and frequent early reviews after an index asthma attack can reduce the future risk of asthma attacks in the next 6 to 12 months.

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Use of oximetry to screen for paediatric obstructive sleep apnoea: is one night enough and is 6 hours too much?

August 2020

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33 Reads

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12 Citations

Archives of Disease in Childhood

Introduction Nocturnal pulse oximetry can be used to screen for obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) using the McGill Oximetry Score (MOS). The MOS has a time threshold for a technically adequate study of 6 hours. It has been suggested that one night of oximetry is sufficient to screen for OSA using the MOS. Aims (1) To evaluate night-to-night variation of the MOS. (2) To determine the impact of recording three nights of oximetry on the screening yield for OSA. (3) To explore whether useful MOS data are discarded when a threshold of 6 hours of oximetry recording is used. Methods A retrospective study of nocturnal pulse oximetry done at home over three consecutive nights in paediatric patients with suspected OSA. Studies were scored (MOS) using thresholds of ≥6 and ≥4 hours of recording. Results A total of 329 patients were studied. MOS scores over three nights showed only fair to moderate agreement. On the first night 126 patients (38%) screened positive for OSA. When three nights of oximetry were done 195 patients (59%) screened positive on at least one of the nights. There were 48 patients with studies of between 4 and 6 hours duration on one or more nights. If these studies are scored 20 patients (42%) would screen positive for OSA on at least one night based on scoring these studies alone. Conclusion One night of oximetry screening may not be sufficient to screen for OSA. Lowering the time threshold to ≥4 hours may increase the screening capability of nocturnal oximetry.





Night-to-night variation of pulse oximetry in children with sleep-disordered breathing

March 2016

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17 Reads

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21 Citations

Archives of Disease in Childhood

Background Sleep-disordered breathing is a common and serious feature of many paediatric conditions and is particularly a problem in children with Down syndrome. Overnight pulse oximetry is recommended as an initial screening test, but it is unclear how overnight oximetry results should be interpreted and how many nights should be recorded. Methods This retrospective observational study evaluated night-to-night variation using statistical measures of repeatability for 214 children referred to a paediatric respiratory clinic, who required overnight oximetry measurements. This included 30 children with Down syndrome. We measured length of adequate trace, basal SpO2, number of desaturations (>4% SpO2 drop for >10 s) per hour (‘adjusted index’) and time with SpO2<90%. We classified oximetry traces into normal or abnormal based on physiology. Results 132 out of 214 (62%) children had three technically adequate nights’ oximetry, including 13 out of 30 (43%) children with Down syndrome. Intraclass correlation coefficient for adjusted index was 0.54 (95% CI 0.20 to 0.81) among children with Down syndrome and 0.88 (95% CI 0.84 to 0.91) for children with other diagnoses. Negative predictor value of a negative first night predicting two subsequent negative nights was 0.2 in children with Down syndrome and 0.55 in children with other diagnoses. Conclusions There is substantial night-to-night variation in overnight oximetry readings among children in all clinical groups undergoing overnight oximetry. This is a more pronounced problem in children with Down syndrome. Increasing the number of attempted nights’ recording from one to three provides useful additional clinical information.


Citations (4)


... Similarly, a retrospective study of children's asthma in the UK showed that the implementation of a structured asthma care pathway on discharge following an attack, with a focus on patient education and self-management, reduced the rate of attacks over the next 12 months. 30 Is Full Adherence Necessary? ...

Reference:

Medication Adherence in Children with Asthma
Implementation of a Children's Safe Asthma Discharge Care Pathway Reduces the Risk of Future Asthma Attacks in Children–A Retrospective Quality Improvement Report

... По крайней мере 3 кластера событий десатурации и по крайней мере 3 падения SpO2 ниже 90% при ночной оксиметрии указывают на СОАС средней или тяжелой степени. ODI4 > 2 эпизода в час в сочетании с симптомами СОАС также демонстрирует высокую положительную прогностическую ценность для индекса апноэгипопноэ > 1 эпизода в час [35,36]. Дети без скоплений событий десатурации имеют низкий риск серьезных респираторных осложнений после аденотонзиллэктомии. ...

Use of oximetry to screen for paediatric obstructive sleep apnoea: is one night enough and is 6 hours too much?
  • Citing Article
  • August 2020

Archives of Disease in Childhood

... The aim of both translational simulation and QI is to improve patient care [8]. Translational simulation has up to this point been described in urban and tertiary care centres [16][17][18][19][20]. The literature did not contain any examples of translational simulation in community or rural hospitals. ...

Translational simulation in action: using simulation-based multidisciplinary teaching to introduce ward-level high-flow oxygen care in bronchiolitis

BMJ Simulation & Technology Enhanced Learning

... The inter-night variability of self-administered, OPO parameters has been investigated in systemic conditions such as COPD [16] and chronic heart failure [17], but not in the normal older, adult population. Studies have investigated inter-night variability in OPO parameters both in adults and children with prior diagnosis of OSA, although findings vary across the different OPO parameters [18][19][20]. Hoppenbrouwer et al. reported minimal inter-night variability of OPO parameters including ODI in children with OSA [20]. However, Stöberl et al. reported high inter-night variability of the ODI in adult OSA patients who were withdrawn from continuous positive airway pressure therapy [18]. ...

Night-to-night variation of pulse oximetry in children with sleep-disordered breathing
  • Citing Article
  • March 2016

Archives of Disease in Childhood