Post-Sepsis Care: Co-designed models of support (SEPSIS SUPPORT)

Project Status

Active

Start Date

Date published:

End Date

Date End:

Project location

  • Australia

Background:

Sepsis is the bodies life-threatening response to an infection, that affects 49 million people globally each year. In Australia, there are an estimated 55,000 annual cases of sepsis, with 18,000 adults requiring intensive care unit (ICU) treatment. In 2017, approximately 25% of paediatric ICU deaths in Australia and New Zealand were related to severe infections.

Survivorship after sepsis is a global health care priority. Sepsis survivors face significant long-term morbidity, with between 30% - 50% of adults experiencing new limitations to usual activities or exacerbation of pre-existing chronic conditions resulting in reduced quality of life. For children, up to 40% experience ongoing impacts to physical and psychosocial development, education, family functioning and reduced quality of life. Consequently, post-sepsis hospital readmission rates are high, with as many as 70% of sepsis survivors readmitted within 1 year of discharge. The resulting direct and indirect impact of sepsis is estimated to cost the Australian health system over $4.7 AUS billion per annum.

Post sepsis follow-up services are rare for both adults and paediatric sepsis survivors. The current lack of follow up post-sepsis care demonstrates a significant unmet need and a clinical gap in alignment with the Australian Commission for Safety and Quality in Healthcare (The Commission) National Sepsis Clinical Care Standard survivorship recommendations. Following discharge, sepsis survivors, their families and those bereaved by sepsis require comprehensive, coordinated follow-up support within the community.

Aim:

The SEPSIS SUPPORT program aims to revolutionise post-sepsis support in Australia by co-designing and piloting innovative new follow-up models of care. The George Institute, in collaboration with Sepsis Australia, Clinical Excellence Queensland, and The Commission aims to develop comprehensive, holistic and culturally safe models of care that will improve the quality of life for survivors and provide essential support to families, caregivers and those bereaved by sepsis. The work targets a critical gap in the management of sepsis and plans to provide a national scalable solution directly addressing Quality Statement 7, Care after hospital and Survivorship of The Commission’s National Sepsis Clinical Care Standard.

SEPSIS SUPPORT has the potential to have a transformative impact on post-sepsis healthcare. Working collaboratively with sepsis survivors, families, caregivers, and those bereaved by sepsis, the program aims to develop successful post-sepsis models of care that will significantly improve the functional outcomes and quality of life for the thousands of Australians impacted by sepsis each year. Sepsis care currently costs the Australian health system billions of dollars annually, the outcomes of this work will inform health policy and funding decisions via a business case focused on sustainable, cost-effective sepsis care that alleviates health system burden and aligns Australian practice with national post-sepsis survivorship recommendations.

Research Methodology:

SEPSIS SUPPORT is a multi-phase program that will co-design and evaluate new post-sepsis follow-up models of care. Phase one will involve a national scoping review and engagement with key sepsis networks to determine what current post sepsis services exist across Australia. Surveys and focus groups with clinicians, sepsis survivors, families, and those bereaved by sepsis will identify post-sepsis support needs and determine the key components required within new follow-up models of care. Stakeholder driven insights will be crucial in the co-design (via Delphi and consensus meeting) and development of the new service models. The final phase will involve pilot testing and evaluating the proposed models at selected vanguard sites and undertaking a business case assessment.

Pilot sites will be selected from our established national sepsis clinical network.

Lead

Associate Professor Naomi Hammond, Critical Care Program Head, The George Institute
Critical care Renal and metabolic

A/Prof Naomi Hammond

Program Head

Related People

Professor Bala Venkatesh

Program Director, Critical Care

Dr Mahesh Ramanan

PhD Candidate

Dr Brett Abbenbroek

Program Manager, Sepsis Australia and Asia Pacific Sepsis Alliance

Professor Simon Finfer AO

Professorial Fellow AO

Dr Serena Knowles

Program Manager, Critical Care Program

Dr. Ashwani Kumar

Public Health Researcher

Funders

Sepsis Australia

National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC)

Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care

Clinical Excellence Queensland

Podcast and Video

Understanding long term outcomes of sepsis

Episode 3

Duration 15 mins - 30 mins

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Critical care

What is sepsis and what are the signs?

Published date

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