| Literature DB >> 35225897 |
Charissa P Cordon1,2, Pamela Baxter2, Ari Collerman1, Kirsten Krull1, Celia Aiello1, Jennifer Lounsbury1,2, Maura MacPhee3, Sonia Udod4, Kim Alvarado1,2, Tim Dietrich1, Noori Akhtar-Danesh2, Meena Ramachandran5, Natalie Meisenburg2.
Abstract
Hospitals across our nation are seeking to implement models of care that meet the primary goals of Quadruple Aim: Improved population health, cost-effective care delivery, and patient and provider satisfaction. In an effort to address the Quadruple Aim and our patients' care needs, Hamilton Health Sciences (HHS) embarked on a model of care delivery redesign, beginning with nursing care delivery. From 2013 to 2018, 12 clinical programs at HHS implemented the Synergy Model with its accompanying synergy patient needs assessment tool for nurses to objectively assess patients' acuity and dependency needs. Data on patients' priority care needs were used to inform a nursing model of care redesign at HHS, including skill mix and staffing levels. This five-year project was an organization-wide quality improvement initiative. As part of the evaluation, HHS leaders partnered with health services nurse researchers to conduct a mixed methods study. This paper describes the evaluation outcomes from the qualitative component of the study, which included interviews with clinical nurse leaders and direct care nurses. Data were analyzed using descriptive thematic analysis. Some key findings were increased nurse awareness of patients' holistic care needs and leaders' capacity to plan staffing assignments based on patients' priority care needs. Themes helped inform recommendations for key stakeholders, including nurse leaders and direct care nurses.Entities:
Keywords: Synergy Model; care delivery redesign; facilitators and barriers; nursing model of care; patient needs assessment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35225897 PMCID: PMC8883925 DOI: 10.3390/nursrep12010011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurs Rep ISSN: 2039-439X
Summary of themes by research question.
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| Themes Exploring staffing models Supporting equitable workloads |
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| Facilitator Themes: Having a dedicated, trusted nurse champion Organizational support Nurse-driven, patient-centered |
| Barrier Themes: Negative perceptions of the model Human resource challenges Attrition of champions Confusion over central standardization versus unit adaptation |
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| Positive Outcomes Themes: More equitable assignments, improved decision making Improved communication and advocacy for more resources Improved workplace culture |
| Negative Outcomes Themes Increased levels of frustration Increased burden on experienced staff Change fatigue |
Synergy Model implementation recommendations.
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− Integrate the synergy patient assessment tool within the electronic health record − Collaborate with leadership and direct care nurses to consider best use of synergy patient assessment data at organizational, unit and individual patient levels − Reinforce the importance of the Synergy Model as a professional practice model that foregrounds nursing contributions to excellent patient care delivery − Provide visible, ongoing commitment to the initiative, including resources for long-term sustainability − Include synergy patient assessment data as a component of accessible visible quality improvement or organizational performance dashboards |
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− Collaborate with direct care nurses to use synergy patient assessment data to make real-time staffing decisions − Be transparent and explicit about how synergy patient assessment data are being used to address direct care nurse shortages − Regularly communicate the practical importance of the Synergy Model at staff meetings and huddles |
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− Be a champion for enhanced, patient-centered care and the Synergy Model − Participate in identifying and refining synergy patient assessment indicators on the scoring guidelines; participate in periodic reliability checks of nurses’ synergy scores − Advocate for the Synergy Model with colleagues: Explain the importance of having a professional practice model that represents nursing within the organization − Recognize barriers to safe, quality patient care and advocate for innovative change |