AAMC Patient and Family Centered Inpatient White Boards
Transcription
AAMC Patient and Family Centered Inpatient White Boards
AAMC Patient and Family Centered Inpatient White Boards: Engaging Patients and Families in Their Care Presenters: Shirley Knelly, MS, LCADC, CPHQ Vice President Quality and Patient Safety Anne Arundel Medical Center Lucretia Jackson, MS Patient and Family Advisor Anne Arundel Medical Center These speakers have indicated no conflict of interest to disclose Anne Arundel Medical Center Goal • Anne Arundel Medical Center’s Patient Safety Committee’s goal was to devise a communication tool, that would : – Allow patients to freely participate, – Be both patient and healthcare friendly, and – Improve communication between the patient, family and healthcare professional. Learning Objectives: • To improve coordination between the healthcare team, patients and their families with involvement in decision making. • Helping to breakdown communication barriers between the patient, family, and healthcare professionals • Highlight specific patient safety precautions that will both educate and empower patients and families. Problem • Driving a Culture Shift from: “Serving” to “Partnering” & Recognizing the Value of the Patient and Family Perspective in Patient Safety Committee Members Lucretia Jackson – Patient Advisor (Lead) William Millios – Patient Advisor Shirley Knelly – Patient Safety Officer Anne Van Waes – Director of Infection Control Kamila Frederick – Director IP Rehab/Respiratory Lil Banchero – Director of Patient Access Cathaleen Ley – Director of Nursing Quality & Research Kathy Whittaker – Manager of Patient Advocacy Ann Marie Pessagno – Senior Nursing Director of Acute Care Services Jill Smitley – Clinical Director for Labor & Delivery Mark Sanchez - Physician Role of Patients in the Care Process T R A D I T I O N A L Role of Patients in the Care Process TRADITIONAL: • Passive Spectators • Only experts are qualified to diagnosis and treat diseases • All decisions rely entirely on knowledge of healthcare workers • Healthcare workers are the guardians of patient’s interest and well being Role of Patients in the Care Process Role of Patients in the Care Process The Why Research The Mayo clinic research showed “out of roughly 2000 surveyed patients, the majority of them said they wanted to help providers prevent medical errors, highlighting patients willingness to be involved” Longtin, et al., Patient Participation: Current Knowledge Applicability to Patient Safety. Mayo Clinic Proc. 2010; 85(1):53 – 62 Based on a Dana Farber study, after patients began providing the organization with input and increasing patient-physician communication, there was a 50% decrease in medication errors per 10,000 doses. The Why Origin of Focus: Desire to focus on Patient and Family Centered Care Voice and Perspective of patient missing Including patient perspective on safety would provide level of transparency and improvements Patients as part of the team in preventing errors The How The Patient Safety Committee, Lead by AAMC’s Patient Safety Committee Patient Advisors,: • Determined that developing a new design for patient whiteboards as a communication and trigger tool will enhance communication, participation and education. • Collection of best practices for patient whiteboards specific to patient safety • Contacted three manufactures looking for sample boards • Developed sample whiteboards and vetting them with various healthcare professionals • Presented sample boards to AAMC’s Patient and Family Advisory Committee Key Points Key point in discussion: “What do patients want to know” as opposed to “What staff want patients to know” Key Points Redesign of patient boards: – Completely headed by patient advisors – Patient-first perspective Focused on not what the doctors wanted to communicate to patients but what patients and their families wanted to know ● Emergency contact information ● Care plan for that day ● Fall information ● Pain score ● Medication information ● Rapid Response Safety Team First Things First • Tour of rooms to determine placement for optimum visibility by patient and family • Pilot Units Selected – MedSurg Unit – Mother/Baby Unit – Heart and Vascular Unit • 3 Month Pilot Timeframe • Staff Education Developed Survey Tool • 25 Patients Per Unit • Patients/families interview by Hospital Advocates • Objectives: – The patient will be able to identify the board in the room – The patient will be able to answer the questions from information filled out on the board – The staff will understand the importance of filling out the information on the board Survey Questions • Do you know the name and # of the nurse/tech taking care of you today? • Do you know your physician’s name? • Did anyone explain goals for you today? • Do you know of any tests scheduled for you today? • Did the staff explain to you about how to use your board? • How useful is the board to you? • Do you have any other feedback about the board? Survey Results • Do you know the name and # of the nurse/tech taking care of you today? 92% reported Yes • Do you know your physician’s name? 81% reported Yes • Did anyone explain goals for you today? 67% reported Yes • Do you know of any tests scheduled for you today? 71% reported Yes • Did the staff explain to you about how to use your board? 73% reported Yes • How useful is the board to you? 91% responded positively • Do you have any other feedback about the board? All Positive feedback Obstacle's Staffing adherence to filling out the boards Pens and Erasers Patient participation Language Barriers Cost Staff Education Design and Content Sustainability Future In the future, the patient boards will be utilized in the bedside shift report process by having clinical staff engage the patient and family by reviewing the information on the whiteboard. Attributes Unique attributes include: Enlisted the patient advisors in the development of the patient boards The development of a tool that engages the patient and family in their care Advocating for the patient and family as partners in care delivery and decision making Providing an additional level of transparency as patients become partners from a safety perspective Helping to breakdown communication barriers between the patient, family and healthcare professionals Highlight specific safety precautions that will both educate and empower patients and families