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Kelly Vana's Nursing Leadership and Management


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rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_74804754-3586-5480-8ee9-26ee9b12cfff">FIGURE 4.4 PMU Newsletter. Newsletter designed to increase communication on safety issues.

      Source: Bonny Dieter.

      Every nurse, at every level of the organization, plays a role in an organization's journey toward high reliability. Each nurse and each member of the interprofessional health care team must be committed to high reliability. Direct Care nurses are essential in HROs. While many contributing factors lead to errors, an actual error occurs when the nurse or another clinician interacts with the patient, at the “sharp end” of care. The nurse is often the last line of defense against health care errors. As such, the nurse must be cognizant of personal behaviors to enhance safety and communication techniques that can be helpful in preventing errors and patient harm.

      However, individual actions are not sufficient. Committed nurse leaders are needed to implement system changes that are essential for becoming an HRO. In collaboration with other organizational leaders, nurse leaders are accountable for the provision of effective and efficient care while protecting the safety of patients, employees, and visitors. Leadership's failure to create an effective safety culture is a contributing factor for many types of adverse events (The Joint Commission, 2018a, 2018b, 2018c). Shaping an organization into a culture of safety and reliability is essential for enhancing safety and improving the “blunt end” or care.

Patient‐Centered Care
Teamwork and Collaboration
Evidence‐based Practice (EBP)
Quality Improvement (QI)
Safety
Informatics

      Source: QSEN.org.

      Patient‐Centered Care

      In this competency, nurses recognize that the patient or designee is the source of control. Patients are full partners when the nurse is providing compassionate and coordinated care. Patients identify their designees, typically family members or close friends. Nurses respect the preferences, values, and needs of their patients and the way in which patients define family.

      The relationship between direct patient care and patient‐centered care is easy to understand. In addition, nurses and nurse leaders must consider patients and their designees in a broader context. Nurse leaders must create organizational cultures that assess and support patient and family preferences. They must use current evidence when designing patient care areas to promote patient‐centered care. Nurse leaders must also work within their institutions to remove barriers to the presence of families and their designees. Establishing a Patient Family Advisory Committee can be helpful in providing input for nurse leaders and other organizational leadership. Patient‐centered care is discussed in greater detail in Chapter 8.

      Case Study 4.1

      Providing patient‐centered care is an important part of building a high reliability culture. Chris, a nurse on the Pediatric ICU, is caring for a 3‐month‐old with a history of supraventricular tachycardia, cough, and congestion. Chris reviews the patient's EHR and finds an order for Propranolol 20 mg TID. As an experienced pediatric nurse, Chris realizes this dose is high. She knows pediatric doses are weight‐based and consults a drug reference book to determine the appropriate dose. Chris also talks with the mother and learns that the infant was taking 2 mg of Propranolol three times a day at home. She then speaks to the physician, who changes the medication order and thanks Chris for her diligence.

      1 Why did Chris consult a drug reference book?

      2 Why did Chris talk with the patient's mother?

      3 How might Chris best present this information to the physician?

      4 How does Chris's diligence and the thank you from the physician help to build a culture of high reliability?

      In this scenario, Chris took two positive safety actions: she demonstrated a questioning attitude while providing patient care, and she involved the patient's mother in his investigation. Chris carefully considered the patient care situation and asked herself some key questions. Is this what I expected to see? Does this fit with what I know? Does this make sense to me? She then investigated by checking with independent, expert sources, competent people, and written materials that could help resolve the question.

      Teamwork and Collaboration

      In this competency, nurses function effectively within both nursing and interprofessional teams. They foster open communication, mutual respect, and shared decision‐making to achieve quality patient care. This needs to happen at every level of the organization. Direct care nurses must function within their scope of practice and integrate the contributions of others to help patients achieve health outcomes. Nurses must communicate effectively with the nursing team and with many other clinicians to enhance patient care and minimize risks associated with handoffs. Nurse leaders must lead or participate in the design and implementation of systems that support effective teamwork. They must create an organization that appreciates and values clear communication. Several strategies for enhancing communication are described below.

      Effective Communication

      Improving the effectiveness of communication among caregivers is one of the National Patient Safety Goals (TJC, 2018a, 2018b, 2018c). Communication ensures that messages are heard correctly and accurately; prevents incorrect assumptions and misunderstandings that could lead to wrong decisions; and is essential within nursing and with other members of the interprofessional team.

      TeamSTEPPS

      TeamSTEPPS ® (AHRQ, 2013a, 2013b) provides several tools for improving communication, including call‐out and closed‐loop (or three way) communication.

      Call‐Out

      Call‐Out is a tool used to communicate important information. It informs all team members simultaneously during an emergency and helps team members anticipate next steps. For example, during a code, the nurse uses a call‐out to report “I've administered 1 mg Epinephrine IV.”

      Closed Loop Communication