Literature DB >> 22977047

Why patients need leaders: introducing a ward safety checklist.

Yogen Amin1, Dave Grewcock, Steve Andrews, Aidan Halligan.   

Abstract

The safety and consistency of the care given to hospital inpatients has recently become a particular political and public concern. The traditional 'ward round' presents an obvious opportunity for systematically and collectively ensuring that proper standards of care are being achieved for individual patients. This paper describes the design and implementation of a 'ward safety checklist' that defines a set of potential risk factors that should be checked on a daily basis, and offers multidisciplinary teams a number of prompts for sharing and clarifying information between themselves, and with the patient, during a round. The concept of the checklist and the desire to improve ward rounds were well received in many teams, but the barriers to adoption were informative about the current culture on many inpatient wards. Although the 'multidisciplinary ward round' is widely accepted as good practice, the medical and nursing staff in many teams are failing to coordinate their workloads well enough to make multidisciplinary rounds a working reality. 'Nursing' and 'medical' care on the ward have become 'de-coupled' and the potential consequences for patient safety and good communication are largely self-evident. This problem is further complicated by a medical culture which values the primacy of clinical autonomy and as a result can be resistant to perceived attempts to 'systematize' medical care through instruments such as checklists.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22977047      PMCID: PMC3439665          DOI: 10.1258/jrsm.2012.120098

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J R Soc Med        ISSN: 0141-0768            Impact factor:   5.344


  5 in total

1.  How Intermountain trimmed health care costs through robust quality improvement efforts.

Authors:  Brent C James; Lucy A Savitz
Journal:  Health Aff (Millwood)       Date:  2011-05-19       Impact factor: 6.301

2.  The business case for quality: economic analysis of the Michigan Keystone Patient Safety Program in ICUs.

Authors:  Hugh R Waters; Roy Korn; Elizabeth Colantuoni; Sean M Berenholtz; Christine A Goeschel; Dale M Needham; Julius C Pham; Allison Lipitz-Snyderman; Sam R Watson; Patricia Posa; Peter J Pronovost
Journal:  Am J Med Qual       Date:  2011 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 1.852

3.  Adopting a surgical safety checklist could save money and improve the quality of care in U.S. hospitals.

Authors:  Marcus E Semel; Stephen Resch; Alex B Haynes; Luke M Funk; Angela Bader; William R Berry; Thomas G Weiser; Atul A Gawande
Journal:  Health Aff (Millwood)       Date:  2010-09       Impact factor: 6.301

4.  Impact of a statewide intensive care unit quality improvement initiative on hospital mortality and length of stay: retrospective comparative analysis.

Authors:  Allison Lipitz-Snyderman; Donald Steinwachs; Dale M Needham; Elizabeth Colantuoni; Laura L Morlock; Peter J Pronovost
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2011-01-28

Review 5.  Systematic review of safety checklists for use by medical care teams in acute hospital settings--limited evidence of effectiveness.

Authors:  Henry C H Ko; Tari J Turner; Monica A Finnigan
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2011-09-02       Impact factor: 2.655

  5 in total
  6 in total

1.  How asking patients a simple question enhances care at the bedside: medical students as agents of quality improvement.

Authors:  Hope Olivia Ward; Sarah Kibble; Gney Mehta; Marc Franklin; Joshua Kovoor; Aled Jones; Sukhmeet Panesar; Andrew Carson-Stevens
Journal:  Perm J       Date:  2013

2.  Medical ward round competence in internal medicine - an interview study towards an interprofessional development of an Entrustable Professional Activity (EPA).

Authors:  Teresa Wölfel; Esther Beltermann; Christian Lottspeich; Elisa Vietz; Martin R Fischer; Ralf Schmidmaier
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2016-07-11       Impact factor: 2.463

Review 3.  New take on the post-take ward round: a quality improvement project undertaken in a district general hospital.

Authors:  Georgia Kate Galloway; Sarah Nahin Choudhury
Journal:  BMJ Open Qual       Date:  2022-10

4.  Developing a ward round checklist to improve patient safety.

Authors:  Gordon Hale; Duncan McNab
Journal:  BMJ Qual Improv Rep       Date:  2015-02-11

Review 5.  "The Longest Way Round Is The Shortest Way Home": An Overhaul of Surgical Ward Rounds.

Authors:  Kunal Shetty; Stephanie Xiu Wern Poo; Kumuthan Sriskandarajah; Michail Sideris; George Malietzis; Ara Darzi; Thanos Athanasiou
Journal:  World J Surg       Date:  2018-04       Impact factor: 3.352

6.  Patient participation in inpatient ward rounds on acute inpatient medical wards: a descriptive study.

Authors:  Bernice Redley; Lauren McTier; Mari Botti; Alison Hutchinson; Harvey Newnham; Donald Campbell; Tracey Bucknall
Journal:  BMJ Qual Saf       Date:  2018-02-23       Impact factor: 7.035

  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.