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1.
J Intensive Care Med ; 37(10): 1288-1295, 2022 Oct.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35072539

Rationale: Geographic co-localization of patients and provider teams (geography) may improve care efficiency and quality. Patients requiring intermediate care present a unique challenge to the geographic model. Objective: Identify the best organizational and staffing model for intermediate care at our academic medical center. Methods: A modified nominal group technique was employed to assess the benefits and limitations of an existing model of intermediate care, identify and review potential alternative models, and choose a new model. Results: In addition to the institution's current model, the benefits and limitations of six alternative organizational and staffing models were characterized. The anticipated impact of each model on nurse: provider communication, maintenance of nursing competencies, nurse satisfaction, efficient utilization of technical and human resources, triage of patients to the unit, care continuity, and the impact on trainee education are described. After considering these features, stakeholders ranked a closed provider staffing model on a unit dedicated to intermediate care highest of the six alternative models. Important outcomes to monitor following transition to a closed staffing model included patient outcomes, nursing job satisfaction and retention, provider and trainee experience, unexpected patient transfers to higher or lower levels of care, and administrative costs. Conclusions: After considering six alternative staffing models for intermediate care, stakeholders ranked a closed provider staffing model highest. Further qualitative and quantitative comparisons to determine optimal models of intermediate care are needed.


Nursing Staff, Hospital , Personnel Staffing and Scheduling , Academic Medical Centers , Humans , Inpatients , Workforce
2.
Am J Med Qual ; 33(4): 413-419, 2018 07.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29183149

Payers, providers, and patients increasingly recognize the importance of quality and safety in health care. Academic Departments of Medicine can advance quality and safety given the large populations they serve and the broad spectrum of diseases they treat. However, there are only few detailed examples of how quality and safety can be organized. This article describes a practical model at The Johns Hopkins Hospital Department of Medicine and details its structure and operation within a large academic health system. It is based on a fractal model that integrates multiple smaller units similar in structure (composition of faculty/staff), process (use of similar tools), and approach (using a common framework to address issues). This organization stresses local, multidisciplinary leadership, facilitates horizontal connections for peer learning, and maintains vertical connections for broader accountability.


Academic Medical Centers/organization & administration , Patient Safety/standards , Quality Improvement/organization & administration , Academic Medical Centers/standards , Health Personnel/organization & administration , Humans , Inservice Training/organization & administration , Leadership , Organizational Culture , Patient Satisfaction , Quality Improvement/standards , Quality Indicators, Health Care/standards , Risk Assessment , Risk Factors
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