| Literature DB >> 29661752 |
Kyle Morawski1, Craig Monsen1, Sukhjit Takhar2, Adam Landman2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hospital communication among members of a patient's care team is a central part of clinical workflow and consumes a large amount of a health care provider's time. Oftentimes the complexity of hospital care leads to difficulty in finding the appropriate contact, which can lead to inefficiencies and frustration. Squire is a Web-based information retrieval app created to improve the speed and efficiency in reaching the appropriate team member during the care of a hospitalized patient.Entities:
Keywords: communication; patient care team
Year: 2018 PMID: 29661752 PMCID: PMC5928333 DOI: 10.2196/humanfactors.6781
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Hum Factors ISSN: 2292-9495
Figure 1The Squire application landing page with most commonly used contacts displayed.
Figure 2The Squire technical architecture. LDAP: lightweight director access protocol; PPD: partners phone directory; SOAP: simple object access protocol; SSL: security service provider.
Figure 3Evaluation survey pre- and post-Squire use. The letter a signifies only present on the post-implementation survey.
Figure 4Semistructured interview guide.
Characteristics of survey participants pre- and post-Squire. PGY: postgraduate year.
| Characteristics of survey participants | Pre-Squire (n=74), n (%) | Post-Squire (n=98), n (%) | ||
| .28 | ||||
| PGY-1 | 35 (47) | 36 (37) | ||
| PGY-2 | 20 (27) | 37 (38) | ||
| PGY-3 | 16 (22) | 22 (22) | ||
| PGY-4 or more | 2 (3) | 3 (3) | ||
| Female | 42 (57) | 38 (39) | .55 | |
| .15 | ||||
| Tech-challenged | 1 (1) | 3 (3) | ||
| Average comfort | 53 (72) | 62 (63) | ||
| Tech-savvy | 14 (19) | 33 (34) | ||
aP value for group differences calculated with Wilcoxon rank-sum test.
Comparison of care team communication efficiency pre- and post-Squire and reported use of Squire.
| Care team communication | Pre-Squire, n (%) | Total minutes | Post-Squire, n (%) | Total minutes | ||
| .66b | ||||||
| Daily | 40 (54) | 58 (59) | ||||
| Weekly | 32 (43) | 34 (35) | ||||
| Monthly | 2 (3) | 6 (6) | ||||
| Never | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | ||||
| .02b | ||||||
| 0-4 mins | 1 (1) | 2 | 16 (16) | 32 | ||
| 5-14 mins | 34 (46) | 323 | 37 (38) | 351 | ||
| 15-29 mins | 22 (30) | 484 | 35 (36) | 770 | ||
| 30-59 mins | 14 (19) | 623 | 10 (10) | 590 | ||
| >60 mins | 3 (4) | 140 | 0 (0) | 0 | ||
| Average time searching for contact per person per day (95% CI) | 22.2 (18.4-26.0) | 16.3 (13.9-18.7) | .01c | |||
| Never | 34 (35) | |||||
| 1-3 days/week | 46 (47) | |||||
| 3-5 days/week | 8 (8) | |||||
| >5 days/week | 10 (10) | |||||
aMidpoint from range of time multiplied by n (ie, midpoint of 5-14 mins is 9.5 mins, multiplied by 34 participants who selected that range, results in a total of 323 minutes searching per day).
bP value for group differences, calculated with Wilcoxon rank-sum test.
cP value calculated using general linear model with robust variances.
Figure 5Time spent searching for appropriate contact pre- and post-Squire use.
Key categories and themes identified during one-on-one interviews with illustrative quotes from participants. PGY: postgraduate year.
| Theme | Example quote(s) | |
| Use of Squire reduces time spent on hold with hospital operators | “Could quantify the time it could peel off the day or week.” [Participant 1, PGY-2] | |
| “It just makes everything quicker, I used to wait on hold with the operator, now I can just look it up.” [Participant 8, PGY-1] | ||
| Squire is particularly valuable for finding contacts from specialized, complex departments | “There are so many headaches during residency, and trying to find the right number shouldn’t be one of them.” [Participant 1, PGY-2] | |
| “Could save me 5 minutes depending on how many wrong phone calls I make or get connected to the wrong places.” [Participant 9, PGY-2] | ||
| Two-way communication with the nursing staff | “There is a lot of ‘cat and mouse’ with trying to call back [nursing staff], especially on night float.” [Participant 3, PGY-1] | |
| “If in Squire we knew the nurse’s name and contact information it would speed things up.” [Participant 9, PGY-2] | ||
| Offline access | “If you could just take out your smartphone and use the features without waiting for a connection to login that would be great.” [Participant 4, PGY-3] | |