4AT Screening on a Care of the Elderly Ward: a Quality Improvement Project on Delirium

Abstract ID
4044
Authors' names
H Hassan; S Myagerimath
Author's provenances
Care of the Elderly Department; Newcastle Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Abstract category
Abstract sub-category
Conditions

Abstract

Introduction
Delirium affects up to 50% of hospitalised older adults (≥65 years) and is significantly associated with patient morbidity and healthcare burden. The 4AT is a rapid, practical, and cost-effective screening tool for delirium. This project evaluated the effectiveness of 4AT implementation on a care of the elderly ward and assessed strategies to increase its use.

Methods
All new admissions to a care of the elderly ward over a one-month period were reviewed. Data collected included: suspected delirium, known/suspected cognitive impairment, and completion of initial 4AT screening prior to ward transfer. On the ward, documentation of initial delirium/dementia assessment by nursing staff, 4AT screening by doctors, and frequency of follow-up 4ATs were recorded. Interventions to promote 4AT use included aide-mémoire tools and dedicated teaching sessions for nursing staff and healthcare assistants. Data were re-collected post-intervention. In addition, self-evaluation surveys were administered to doctors to assess confidence in recognising delirium pre- and post-intervention.

Results
Following the interventions, completion of initial delirium/dementia assessments by nursing staff on the ward increased from 72% (n=54) to 90% (n=50), initial 4AT screening on the ward improved from 3.7% to 30%, and follow-up 4AT use increased from 1.9% to 26%. Doctors also reported higher confidence in recognising delirium.

Conclusions
Targeted education and simple ward-based prompts significantly increased the use of 4AT and improved staff confidence in delirium recognition. Embedding structured delirium screening into routine practice may enhance early detection and management of this common and serious condition.

Comments

This is a really valuable QI project. The stepwise approach—using ward prompts, reminders, and then dedicated teaching for nursing staff and HCAs—clearly increased both initial and follow-up 4AT screening on the ward. It’s great to see that this improvement was sustained across both PDSA cycles, and that doctors reported increased confidence in recognising delirium. Embedding routine 4AT use like this has real potential to strengthen early detection and management on busy older adult wards. 

Submitted by beatrixbanks@a… on

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Really good to see such an improvement after the interventions, and how it was maintained between the first and second cycles!

Submitted by mzyam42@nottin… on

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This project is an excellent and impactful quality-improvement initiative that clearly demonstrates how targeted education and simple ward-based prompts can enhance 4AT screening and staff confidence, ultimately strengthening delirium detection and care.

Submitted by lin.aung1@nhs.net on

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Excellent project

Really emphasizes and reinforces the importance of non invasive cost effective tool in recognising delirium

 

Submitted by dr.ishaqsharee… on

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