| Pre-implementation Phase | | Categories | Participant Quotes |
| Barrier | Negative nurses’ attitudes | The biggest challenge was getting some of the folks [nurses] who had been here for longer periods, so higher seniority, to get away from the practice of not having family present.-participant 2 |
| Once you say 'open' it's kind of just literally open the doors for people to come, and so the initial reaction was, how am I going to manage with people just drifting in and out coming in? -participant 9B |
| …even when the visitation was starting to be opened a little more and we were unlocking doors and stuff, there was kind of a push back [from nurses] 'but not children, children shouldn't be in here,'-participant 3 |
| Strategy | Using empathy | And, you know for most of the people that were resistant, even they could say, you know, 'if this was my loved one, yes, I'd want to be here' so we leaned very heavily on that one kind of component. -participant 11 |
| I know a particular patient that comes to mind that he had a ruptured aneurism…mentally he was just very depressed and down and stuff… And I said [to his wife], well if you would like to come in and bring the boys in to see him…I’ll make special arrangements for them to come in and see him…you could see such a difference as soon as he saw those boys. -participant 1 |
| Advocating evidence-based practice | We really look to the AACN to help guide our practice. Our Chief Nurse Officer challenged them to go to the literature to find the information about visitation, the nurses went to the literature and said, ‘it is better for the patient’, and that’s where I think, we kind of turned the entire pendulum on the ICU about open visitation -Participant 9A |
| I think that if we remember the fact that we all want an evidence-based environment then we don't have a leg to stand on in terms of fighting it [open visitation]. -participant 13 |
| Working with some of the folks in child life specialty, and with our social worker, and educating the staff on how for children it's actually more traumatic not allowing them to come in to visit - participant 2 |
| Implementation Phase | Barrier | Negative nurses’ attitudes | Sometimes they view family members as a hindrance verses being helpful or a partner in this person's journey. -participant 15 |
| There are some difficult families that impede the care, and sometimes just going in and out of the rooms and getting interrupted numerous times it slows down the nurse and what she needs to be doing - participant 8 |
| Strategy | Advocating evidence-based practice | Find your champions because they exist within your intensive care units, and you know who these nurses are; find your champions…and then look at the evidence, because all of this…along with all the literature supports it, on AACN's website for everyone to be able to view -participant 7A |
| Shared governance | The biggest piece of anything is sort of frontline staff…that they're driving it, and that they are facilitated by someone who can guide them but not take it over, that the front-line staff work on it, develop it and have them own it, because the buy-in is much more effective and quicker -participant 5 |
| It [implementing open visitation] was driven by the staff, if you [use] shared governance models to bring it through-participant 6 |
| I think Patient Advisory Councils are really important… I think having the voice of the patient is a strategy that works every time -participant 14 |
| Sustainment Phase | Barrier | Clinical | If it's flu season, the request that we have for them is to wear a mask or not visit if they had colds - participant 15 |
| When there's isolation issues, if it's very problematic and patients, visitors are not following appropriate isolation they can be banned from coming - participant 3 |
| Non-clinical | It [ICU] does have a locked door at night now just because we would have problems with sometimes homeless getting into the building and then wandering into the rooms, so they do that for their [patient] safety -participant 3 |
| We have been allowed to restrict any visitor if they are not complying with the rules we have set…and if they continue to show that type of behaviour then we are allowed to call security to have them removed from the premises -participant 15 |
| Strategy | Nurse discretion | You don't want staff, a beside ICU nurse to feel that they're not empowered to have a voice if someone is being disruptive to the care of the patient, or you know approaching them in a way that they feel threatened…we know that we're dealing with people who are in stress, and sometimes they're not making the best decisions or communicating in the most helpful way. -participant 7A |
| That's why we still give them [nurses] the autonomy if there's something impactful going on, we don't want it to become a spectator sport with the visitors. So, we still have that piece in there [referring to visitation policy] where we can restrict -participant 8 |
| Security | We are an inner-city hospital, we set up a process for patients, through one door after eight o'clock at night, and the security guard sits at that door at night, and then they [security] would give them name tags, you know, like, 'Approved from Security,' – participant 15 |
| They have panic buttons for the nurses - participant 14 |
| So, if my nurses have felt threatened by an aggressive visitor, first they call security. If security doesn't respond in a way that makes them feel comfortable, or [does not] remove that person, then they are at liberty to call our local police department - participant 3 |
| Family spaces | We believe that patient rooms have a clinician zone, a patient zone, and a family zone. So, we encourage families to stay and participate in care -participant 6 |
| Our redesign of our space has helped a lot to make it more comfortable for all to be present, and we do have definitely lots of family members present in our unit. We also have two big family lounges…and there is also coffee, ice machine with water, and a refrigerator and microwave in that space, and some tables for eating -participant 10A |
| I think we've created a culture that it's not even an expectation it's just something that we do…we understand that the integral parts that patients' families and loved ones are whoever they define as 'family members,' the important role that they play in the healing process, and how they advocate for their loved one, and are truly part of our interdisciplinary team. -participant 10B |