Literature DB >> 27901600

The Role of the Built Environment: How Decentralized Nurse Stations Shape Communication, Patient Care Processes, and Patient Outcomes.

Kevin Real1, Shoshana H Bardach2, David R Bardach3.   

Abstract

Increasingly, health communication scholars are attending to how hospital built environments shape communication, patient care processes, and patient outcomes. This multimethod study was conducted on two floors of a newly designed urban hospital. Nine focus groups interviews were conducted with 35 health care professionals from 10 provider groups. Seven of the groups were homogeneous by profession or level: nursing (three groups), nurse managers (two groups), and one group each of nurse care technicians ("techs") and physicians. Two mixed groups were comprised of staff from pharmacy, occupational therapy, patient care facilitators, physical therapy, social work, and pastoral care. Systematic qualitative analysis was conducted using a conceptual framework based on systems theory and prior health care design and communication research. Additionally, quantitative modeling was employed to assess walking distances in two different hospital designs. Results indicate nurses walked significantly more in the new hospital environment. Qualitative analysis revealed three insights developed in relationship to system structures, processes, and outcomes. First, decentralized nurse stations changed system interdependencies by reducing nurse-to-nurse interactions and teamwork while heightening nurse interdependencies and teamwork with other health care occupations. Second, many nursing-related processes remained centralized while nurse stations were decentralized, creating systems-based problems for nursing care. Third, nursing communities of practices were adversely affected by the new design. Implications of this study suggest that nurse station design shapes communication, patient care processes, and patient outcomes. Further, it is important to understand how the built environment, often treated as invisible in communication research, is crucial to understanding communication within complex health care systems.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27901600     DOI: 10.1080/10410236.2016.1239302

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Commun        ISSN: 1041-0236


  2 in total

1.  Evaluation of Automated Video Monitoring to Decrease the Risk of Unattended Bed Exits in Small Rural Hospitals.

Authors:  Katherine J Jones; Gleb Haynatzki; Lucas Sabalka
Journal:  J Patient Saf       Date:  2021-12-01       Impact factor: 2.243

2.  Nursing Unit Design, Nursing Staff Communication Networks, and Patient Falls: Are They Related?

Authors:  Barbara B Brewer; Kathleen M Carley; Marge Benham-Hutchins; Judith A Effken; Jeffrey Reminga
Journal:  HERD       Date:  2018-06-19
  2 in total

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