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1.
Hosp Pediatr ; 8(4): 220-226, 2018 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29559504

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: During hospital admission, communication between primary care physicians (PCPs) and hospital medicine (HM) physicians provides an opportunity for collaboration. Two-way communication facilitates collaboration by allowing the receiver to ask and respond to questions. At our institution, most HM-to-PCP communication occurred by telephone call after discharge. Our specific aim was to increase the percentage of patients for whom a telephone conversation occurred between HM and PCPs during hospital admission from 40% to >80%. METHODS: An improvement team that included PCPs and HM physicians redesigned the process for communication with PCPs to emphasize collaboration during hospitalization. Interventions were used to target key drivers of information transparency, PCP and HM provider buy-in, the value of early call initiation, process standardization, accommodating provider availability, and preoccupation with failure. We used improvement-science methods and run charts to measure our progress and attain our goal. RESULTS: The median weekly percentage of patients with a phone call completed during hospitalization increased from 40% to 85% at the satellite campus and 40% to 80% at the main campus. In addition to the standardized use of a telephone operator system to route calls and follow-up on unplaced calls, critical interventions included feedback on PCP call preferences to providers and the provider script for calls. CONCLUSIONS: PCPs and HM physicians applied quality-improvement methodology to ensure reliable HM-PCP communication during hospital admission. Interventions to facilitate communication between providers and learners (who may otherwise have limited interaction), such as the scripting of phone calls and feedback from PCPs to HM physicians, were important for success.


Assuntos
Continuidade da Assistência ao Paciente/normas , Médicos Hospitalares , Comunicação Interdisciplinar , Alta do Paciente/normas , Médicos de Atenção Primária , Melhoria de Qualidade/normas , Qualidade da Assistência à Saúde/normas , Atitude do Pessoal de Saúde , Registros Eletrônicos de Saúde , Pesquisa sobre Serviços de Saúde , Humanos , Relações Interprofissionais , Pediatria , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes
2.
J Hosp Med ; 10(9): 574-80, 2015 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26033563

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Timely and reliable verbal communication between hospitalists and primary care physicians (PCPs) is critical for prevention of medical adverse events but difficult in practice. Our aim was to increase the proportion of completed verbal handoffs from on-call residents or attendings to PCPs within 24 hours of patient discharge from a hospital medicine service to ≥90% within 18 months. METHODS: A multidisciplinary team collaborated to redesign the process by which PCPs were contacted following patient discharge. Interventions focused on the key drivers of obtaining stakeholder buy-in, standardization of the communication process, including assigning primary responsibility for discharge communication to a single resident on each team and batching calls during times of maximum resident availability, reliable automated process initiation through leveraging the electronic health record (EHR), and transparency of data. A run chart assessed the impact of interventions over time. RESULTS: The percentage of calls initiated within 24 hours of discharge improved from 52% to 97%, and the percentage of calls completed improved to 93%. Results were sustained for 18 months. Standardization of the communication process through hospital telephone operators, use of the discharge order to ensure initiation of discharge communication, and batching of phone calls were associated with improvements in our measures. CONCLUSION: Reliable verbal discharge communication can be achieved through the use of a standardized discharge communication process coupled with the EHR.


Assuntos
Comunicação , Médicos Hospitalares , Hospitais Pediátricos/normas , Alta do Paciente/normas , Pediatria , Médicos de Atenção Primária , Criança , Continuidade da Assistência ao Paciente/normas , Registros Eletrônicos de Saúde/normas , Humanos , Relações Interprofissionais , Qualidade da Assistência à Saúde , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes
3.
Hosp Pediatr ; 5(3): 127-33, 2015 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25732985

RESUMO

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Handoffs ensure patient safety during patient care transitions in the hospital setting. At our institution, verbal handoffs communicated by resident physicians are suggested practice for patients transferring from the PICU to the hospital medicine (HM) service. Despite their importance, these verbal handoffs occurred only 76% of the time before patient arrival on HM units. Our goal was to increase the completion rate of verbal handoffs to 100% within 5 months. METHODS: Baseline data were collected in a daily survey of HM residents. Interventions were developed and tested on small, incremental change cycles. Key interventions included education about the importance of handoffs, standardization of the handoff process, standardization of handoff documentation, and identification and mitigation of handoff documentation failures. We tracked handoff completion rates by using statistical control charts. After success with improving the completion rate of patient handoffs to the HM service, we applied our process to handoffs from the PICU to all inpatient services. RESULTS: Median completion of verbal patient handoff increased from 76% to 100% within 6 weeks, with improvement sustained for 15 months. Physician compliance with electronic medical record documentation increased from 58% to 94% within 8 months. After spreading to all patients transferring out of the PICU, documentation of patient handoffs increased from 76% to 94% in 5 months. CONCLUSIONS: A system using improvement science methods was successful in increasing the reliability of resident verbal patient handoffs. Consistent documentation and internal redundancy with checklists were associated with sustained improvement.


Assuntos
Transferência da Responsabilidade pelo Paciente/normas , Transferência de Pacientes , Pediatria/educação , Gestão da Segurança/organização & administração , Lista de Checagem/normas , Registros Eletrônicos de Saúde , Humanos , Unidades de Terapia Intensiva/normas , Internato e Residência , Relações Interprofissionais , Transferência de Pacientes/métodos , Transferência de Pacientes/normas , Melhoria de Qualidade , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Ensino
4.
BMJ Qual Saf ; 23(5): 428-36, 2014 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24470173

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Bed capacity management is a critical issue facing hospital administrators, and inefficient discharges impact patient flow throughout the hospital. National recommendations include a focus on providing care that is timely and efficient, but a lack of standardised discharge criteria at our institution contributed to unpredictable discharge timing and lengthy delays. Our objective was to increase the percentage of Hospital Medicine patients discharged within 2 h of meeting criteria from 42% to 80%. METHODS: A multidisciplinary team collaborated to develop medically appropriate discharge criteria for 11 common inpatient diagnoses. Discharge criteria were embedded into electronic medical record (EMR) order sets at admission and could be modified throughout a patient's stay. Nurses placed an EMR time-stamp to signal when patients met all discharge goals. Strategies to improve discharge timeliness emphasised completion of discharge tasks prior to meeting criteria. Interventions focused on buy-in from key team members, pharmacy process redesign, subspecialty consult timeliness and feedback to frontline staff. A P statistical process control chart assessed the impact of interventions over time. Length of stay (LOS) and readmission rates before and after implementation of process measures were compared using the Wilcoxon rank-sum test. RESULTS: The percentage of patients discharged within 2 h significantly improved from 42% to 80% within 18 months. Patients studied had a decrease in median overall LOS (from 1.56 to 1.44 days; p=0.01), without an increase in readmission rates (4.60% to 4.21%; p=0.24). The 12-month rolling average census for the study units increased from 36.4 to 42.9, representing an 18% increase in occupancy. CONCLUSIONS: Through standardising discharge goals and implementation of high-reliability interventions, we reduced LOS without increasing readmission rates.


Assuntos
Eficiência Organizacional , Hospitais Pediátricos/organização & administração , Alta do Paciente , Melhoria de Qualidade , Ocupação de Leitos/métodos , Ocupação de Leitos/normas , Ocupação de Leitos/estatística & dados numéricos , Criança , Registros Eletrônicos de Saúde , Hospitais Pediátricos/normas , Hospitais Pediátricos/estatística & dados numéricos , Humanos , Tempo de Internação/estatística & dados numéricos , Equipe de Assistência ao Paciente/organização & administração , Equipe de Assistência ao Paciente/normas , Equipe de Assistência ao Paciente/estatística & dados numéricos , Alta do Paciente/normas , Readmissão do Paciente/estatística & dados numéricos , Melhoria de Qualidade/organização & administração
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