| Literature DB >> 30345785 |
Katie E Raffel1, Neha Gupta1, Christopher Vercammen-Grandjean2, Jessica Hohman3, Sumant Ranji4, Edgar Pierluissi4, Michelle Mourad1.
Abstract
Resident-led quality improvement (QI) is an important component of resident education yet sustainability of improvement and impact on resident education have rarely been explored. This study describes a resident-led intervention to improve nursing (RN)-provider (MD) communication at discharge-the Discharge Time-Out (DTO)- and explores its uptake and sustainability. One year later, residents were surveyed regarding QI self-efficacy and planned QI involvement. Baseline verbal RN-MD communication at discharge was rare. During DTO implementation, rates of structured communication averaged 56% (341/608) with several months >70%. During the monitoring phase, this fell to 45% and did not recover (833/1852). Participating residents reported increased QI self-efficacy (P < .05) and increased likelihood of participating in future QI (P < .05). The DTO increased RN-MD communication but was not sustained. Resident-led QI should explicitly address sustainability to achieve improvement and educational objectives. To foster resident education and avoid short-lived, low-impact projects, increased attention should be given to sustainability of resident-led QI.Keywords: discharge safety; interdisciplinary communication; quality improvement curriculum; resident education; sustainability of quality improvement
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30345785 DOI: 10.1177/1062860618804462
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Qual ISSN: 1062-8606 Impact factor: 1.852