| Literature DB >> 27429278 |
Tracey L Yap1,2, Susan Kennerly3, Kirsten Corazzini4,5, Kristie Porter6, Mark Toles7, Ruth A Anderson8,9.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: The purpose of the manuscript is to describe long-term care (LTC) staff perceptions of a music cueing intervention designed to improve staff integration of pressure ulcer (PrU) prevention guidelines regarding consistent and regular movement of LTC residents a minimum of every two hours. The Diffusion of Innovation (DOI) model guided staff interviews about their perceptions of the intervention's characteristics, outcomes, and sustainability.Entities:
Keywords: diffusion of innovation; implementation; long-term care; multidisciplinary healthcare teams; nursing interventions; pressure ulcer prevention
Year: 2014 PMID: 27429278 PMCID: PMC4934592 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare2030299
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Questions, definitions and representative quotations.
| Questions | Innovation Characteristics: | Themes | # of quotes | % of Quotes | % of Conversation | # Groups Who Discussed | Exemplar Quotation(s) from Focus Groups |
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| What have you seen happen as a result of this program? | ( |
| 65 | 16% | “It just helps the residents, I mean they will dance with us, and they usually didn’t do that. I think they enjoyed… they enjoyed the music a lot.” | ||
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| 10 | 3% | [Music was] “Kind of a side benefit, I would conjecture from the actual looking at the skin issues, probably held about the same, I would conjecture …. So you don’t know that there is any difference necessarily, then? I would guess probably not.” | ||||
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| What were your expectations of the pressure ulcer prevention program? Were these expectations met or not? Please describe. | ( |
| 45 | 11% | “first management team picked music and didn’t do that again … then half staff, half resident music picks” | ||
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| 4 | 1% | “some departments did not get involved” | ||||
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| How did you feel about participating in the pressure ulcer prevention program? | ( |
| 74 | 19% | “it really wasn’t too far from our routine, it was just a different way to approach it” “very good that it was interdisciplinary … It’s an opportunity for everybody” | ||
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| 72 | 18% | “double the paperwork” “[Sundays] we usually have a guest reading scripture and then the music would play. They usually get here between 10:00 and 12:00 and that’s when the music plays … and you got “Johnny B Goode” coming on and he’s trying to preach” | ||||
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| What have you seen happen as a result of this program? | ( |
| 37 | 9% | “it has been more of a quality of life thing, than a clinical thing” | ||
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| 0 | no examples | |||||
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| Were there any barriers to your ability to perform the activities requested when the musical prompt occurred? | ( |
| 13 | 3% | “good reminder for both staff and residents” | ||
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| 18 | 5% | “you are saddled with even more detailed record keeping” “Dietary, if it was during lunch, it’s just that they are busy” | ||||
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| What is there about this pressure ulcer prevention program that you can still use once this program ends? | ( |
| 15 | 4% | “everyone got into a routine and went with it” | ||
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| 20 | 5% | “I think overall it started well, but kind of slacked with staff as the program went on. Probably due to lack of enforcement, you know, on all of our parts.” | ||||
| 25 |
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| “touchscreen for documentation” “we realized half way through the study we should have had a blog site for all the facilities involved” |
Figure 1System of analysis. PrU, pressure ulcer; DOI, Diffusion of Innovation.