I am well acquainted with hourly rounding. My organization has tried numerous times to implement hourly rounding and for many reasons, the effort is never hardwired. Although the implementation of hourly rounding is very effective as proactive way to prevent falls many organization struggles with sustaining rounding. Some of the barriers are lack of staff buy-in, acuity levels, staffing, and poor documentation workflows (Toole, Meluskey, & Hall, 2016). In our post-fall huddles, one of the questions asked is, when was the patient last seen. In many cases, it is more than an hour. If the patient has more contact with the staff, the risk of falling is less. One new technology that we are about to roll out is a new call system that will track
Safety is an essential factor in the creation of the healing environment and this is dependent on the role of the caregiver and the patient when it is possible. “Safety is a basic component of professional nursing and Caritas Processes. Safety concerns affect all of the nurse’s activities related to supporting, protecting, and correcting the environment for healing at all levels, To feel safe and protected is a basic need” (Watson, 2008, p. 13). Many factors impede the safety of patients in a healing environment such as Risk of falls, Pressure ulcers, and close calls. Ford’s literature (as cited in Woolley et al, 2012) found that “hourly rounding resulted in a 52% reduction in call light use, giving nurses more time to provide patient care and prevent patient calls” and in Bourgault et al.’s study conducted in 2006 (as cited in Woolley et al, 2012) “expected outcomes of hourly rounding included increase
Providing the best care to each patient starts with providing the proper amount of staff members to each unit. Looking at the needs of different units not only allows administration to see areas for improvement, but also areas that are being handled correctly. Utilizing the indicators provided by The Joint Commission, 4 East, a pediatric medical/surgical floor, has a high rate of falls and nosocomial pressure ulcers that appears to be related to the increase overtime nurses have been working for that floor (Nightingale, 2010). Research has shown increases in adverse events have been related to nurses working over 40 hours a week (Bae, 2012).
Patient falls in hospitals continue to be a major and costly problem. The definition of a patient fall is an unplanned descent to the floor, assisted or unassisted, with or without injury to the patient. The authors of this article wanted to investigate the effect “missed nursing care” has on patient fall rates and patient outcomes. The authors also looked at hospital staffing as it relates to patient falls and nursing staff having enough time to carry out all nursing responsibilities.
Devote effort to focus on patient’s need for help with toileting, pain level, and positioning.
The biggest distractions as an acute care leader that impacts my work are numerous administrative meetings; they tend to take up most of my daily schedule leaving me with little time to talk to the patients. To alleviate this challenge I have allocated time on my daily calendar to participate in bedside inter-disciplinary and leader rounding on the unit with the team to discuss patient plan of care with other healthcare teams, patient and family. This time allocation enables me to have designated time dedicated to making sure the patient receives my professional presence that supports
A change I would recommend for this department is for the staff to become more aware of how rounding and pain management affects the patient experience. Another suggestion based on the objective of improving patient experience would be to continue educating staff on how patient experience plays a crucial role in the reimbursement and how it impacts not only the hospital but them as well. I also recommend that the staff should continue performing rounding and pain management as if they were still being measured so that eventually these two areas will occur automatically without even having to think about it. By doing so, it will turn into a habit and will hopefully lead to a more consistent score in these two areas. New staff should also be trained that both monitoring for pain management and rounding is standard practice for the unit. As it is a lot easier to train someone new to get into this habit earlier than it is to try and implement it later after he/she has already established a routine. Staff members that have a higher role in the department must also continue to lead by example as well, in order to instill the importance of these two areas. Lastly, I recommend that the department needs to find a way to motivate and encourage staff to do rounding and pain management effectively with more internal rewards such as staff members seeing the positive impact focusing on these two areas have on patient lives.
Have you ever heard about teenage kids helping the lives of others? These two groups of teens help people in need. The courageous (ADJ) Dragon Slayers willingly (ADV) help put out fires in their community. In Minutes that Matter, teenagers donate money so that people in the military can easily (ADV) call home. In both stories the teenage kids help their community.
Rounding allows nurses to gather information in a structured way. It’s proactive, not reactive like call light responses. It’s a great way to get a handle on patient problems before they occur. It’s all about providing the best patient-driven health care… The great thing about hourly rounding is that it doesn’t benefit only the patients. (¶ 4).
Since I work in a critical care setting, I am usually opposite the door to my patient's room. Hourly rounding in the ICU or even more often, depends on the acuity of the patient. Therefore, this was not an issue on my unit. What is evident is the noise level and this is where they have managers now doing frequent rounding at nights to assess the noise level. As a result, patient satisfaction scores improved significantly when compared to the previous one.
Tzeng and Yin (2009) identified the main reasons for call light use and the impact that hourly rounds have in decreasing the call light use rate and patient falls. This study was done in a community hospital located in Michigan and used archived hospital data for analyses. The archives involved were from four adult acute care units during February 2007- June 2008: one surgical unit with 53 beds, two medical units with both totaling 87 beds and one medical-surgical combined unit with 58 beds (Tzeng, & Yin, 2009).
Patients in a hospital and/or healthcare facilities have to be cared for all day and all night, everyday of the week by nurses. The usual way to fulfill this need is to divide up the day into three 8-hour shifts. Different shifts have been put into place to help improve nurse satisfaction, decrease the nursing shortage and save the hospital money. The 24-hour day is made up of two 12-hour shifts; 12 hours in the day and 12 hours at night. There has been quite an ongoing debate over the years regarding this issue of nurses working over 8 hours in a single day. Many people, such as hospital nursing administrators, have reason to believe that working long hour shifts causes more errors in
Despite many efforts to improve staffing numbers, there is often still a staff shortage among staff in hospitals and acute care settings. While the most obvious solution to short staffing is to hire more nurses, there are also other ways to make staffing more effective. A patient acuity tool is a staffing instrument that can be used to decide how much time and attention each individual patient requires. By knowing the acuity level of each patient, charge nurses can decide how many patients each nurse can be assigned to at a time. This essay describes the way a patient acuity instrument improves healthcare outcomes by promoting patient-centered care and improving on key nurse competencies including teamwork and collaboration, quality improvement, and safety measures.
The results of the study showed that significant increase in patient satisfaction scores, decreased call light usage, and reduction in patients fall rates. One-hour rounding shows higher satisfaction than two hour- rounding. Hypothesis supported the study because the research shows rounding can reduce patient call light usage (Meade, Bursell, Ketelsen , 2006). The theoretical framework that forms the basis of the research is that consistent nursing rounds can meet the basic needs of patient and ultimately reduce call light use and [pic]improve management of patient care while also[pic] increasing [pic]patient satisfaction and[pic] safety.
If there is a fall with injury, the manager has the ability to go back and check how long the call light was on prior to a fall. However, this information is not used to prevent and emphasize the relationship between the length of time a call light is on and the rate of fall. Most nurses and patient care technicians are not aware that the manager can back-track the call light and find out this information. To measure the rate of falls to the length of time a call light is answered, the nurse working on the project choose the histogram. This illustrates the length of time in the Y axis and the rate of falls in the X axis during the period of study (time frame). The histogram itself will include a control group, average answers, and delay answers to call light. This example was imported and modified from a previous study done comparing the numbers of call lights and nursing rounds by (Meade et al. 2006).
Problem: Patient falls have long been a common and serious problem in hospitals across the nation, causing