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Working together to improve the

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Module 1: survey of the experiences of staff, patients and visitors ... the decor is unpleasant and the bedrooms are quite frankly dank and horrible ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Working together to improve the


1
Working together to improve the quality of mental
health services
2
  • National Audit of Violence
  • Key findings and recommendations
  • Maureen McGeorge, Leanne Shinkwin
  • and Graham Hinchcliffe

3
  • Summary of presentation
  • Outline of the audit
  • Key findings
  • - acute services vs older peoples services
  • - 2004 vs 2006
  • Main messages
  • Questions

4
  • Outline of the audit May 2006 - July 2007
  • Introductory Workshop
  • Contextual data
  • Module 1 survey of the experiences of staff,
    patients and visitors
  • Module 2 environmental audit
  • Module 3a review of a series of incidents
  • Module 3b case note audit of the use of rapid
    tranquillisation
  • Feedback Workshop
  • Action plans

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  • Key findings the environment
  • Support systems
  • - 20 acute ward nurses rated alarm systems as
    inadequate (25 of OA nurses)
  • - 31 nurses knew who their LSMS was (20 in OA
    services)
  • Space over 40 nurses in both specialties rated
    space as inadequate
  • Temperature around 60 nurses and non-clinical
    staff in both specialties rated the wards as too
    hot

8
  • Key findings communication and culture
  • Admissions
  • - 70 nurses did not have a say over admissions
    (76 in OPS)
  • - 50 staff in both specialties unable to access
    additional resources if they had a difficult
    mix of patients
  • Being listened to around 30 nurses from both
    specialties felt their concerns were not taken
    seriously and acted upon

9
  • Key findings supporting staff
  • Ward staffing
  • - 42 staff felt staff ratios were not
    appropriate to resident population (30 OPS)
  • - 30 nurses and clinicians felt skills mix were
    not appropriate to resident population (25 OPS)
  • - 39 nurses felt gender mix were not
    appropriate to resident population (50 OPS)
  • Supervision 40 nurses said they were not
    receiving one-to-one clinical supervision (44
    OPS)
  • Level nurse satisfaction with supports from
    colleagues was high (92 satisfied/totally
    satisfied)(90 OPS)
  • Levels satisfaction with supports from senior
    management
  • team low at 61 (68 OPS)

10
  • Key findings staff training
  • Of 85 of nurses involved in managing severely
    challenging/violent incidents (79 in OPS), 29
    had not received PSTS training (34 in OPS)
  • Of 94 of nurses involved in carrying out
    observations, only 31 received ongoing
    competency training (27 in OPS)
  • Of 68 of nurses involved in admin/prescribing/
    monitoring rapid tranquillisation (48 OPS)
  • - one-half had received training around the legal
    framework authorising its use (36 in OPS)
  • - 41 in the use of pulse oximeters (39 in OPS)
  • 68 ongoing competency training to a level of ILS
  • (72 in OPS)

11
  • Key findings patients experiences
  • Almost one-fifth shared space with members of the
    opposite sex when they didnt want to (16 in
    OPS)
  • 43 did not have privacy when being given their
    medication (40 in OPS)
  • 22 did not have opportunities to go
    outdoors/leave the ward (24 in OPS)
  • Over one-fifth did not feel their concerns were
    taken seriously and acted upon (12 in OPS)

12
  • Key findings patients experiences
  • 27 said they had not been given enough
    information about why they had been admitted (36
    in OPS)
  • Almost one-third were not satisfied with their
    involvement in decisions about their care
    (one-fifth in OPS)
  • Only one-half agreed that there were daily
    opportunities for physical activity/exercise (62
    in OPS)
  • 56 did not agree that there was an adequate
    choice of therapies available during the day (48
    in OPS)

13
  • Some quotes contrasting environments
  • A pleasant and homely environment. Staff and
    patients friendly and welcoming. (a visitor)
  • This ward is friendly and kind. Just the way
    it should be. (a patient)
  • The ward appears dirty, the decor is unpleasant
    and the bedrooms are quite frankly dank and
    horrible with plain walls and nothing homely
    about them. (a nurse)
  • The patient does not like shouting, so when
    someone is kicking off, he hides in his room and
    tends not to come
  • out again. (a visitor)

14
  • But are things getting
  • better or worse?

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19
  • Key messages older peoples services

20
  • It shall be the duty of every employer to
    ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the
    health, safety and welfare at work of all his
    employees. (HSE, 1974)
  • 64 of nurses on older peoples wards reported
    that they had been physically assaulted. These
    figures were higher than any other staff group in
    this specialty, or in services for adults of
    working age. As one nurse explained, Sometimes
    it feels very much part of the daily routine to
    be either verbally or physically abused by
    patients.
  • There are many causes of violence on wards.
    Trusts must use their local audit findings to
    develop plans that address
  • their problems.

21
  • Healthcare services are provided in
    environments which promote effective care and
    optimise health outcomes by being a safe and
    secure environment which protects patients,
    staff, visitors and their property, and the
    physical assets of the organisation. (Core
    Standard C20a)
  • Over 40 of staff did not have access to a
    personal alarm, and 25 of nurses described the
    emergency alarm system on their ward as
    ineffective.
  • Many environmental precipitants to violence are
    amenable to improvement and should be tackled as
    a matter of urgency.

22
  • The NICE Guideline (2005) details the training
    that those involved in preventing and managing
    violence on wards should receive.
  • Staff in older peoples services were less
    likely than their colleagues in services for
    working age adults, to have been trained. For
    example although almost 80 of nurses were
    involved in managing incidents, only 66 of those
    had received the recommended training many staff
    complained that their training was not tailored
    to the particular needs of older peoples
    services.
  • Trusts must deal with shortfalls in training as
    a priority.

23
  • The Governments Core Standard C13a requires
    that healthcare organisations have systems in
    place to ensure that staff treat patients, their
    relatives and carers with dignity and respect.
  • 92 of patients reported that they had been
    cared for in a dignified manner only 5 felt
    that their religious or cultural need had not
    been respected.
  • Trusts should commend their staffs good
    practice.

24
  • The NSF for Older People (2001) expects that
    older people will be treated as individuals and
    enabled to make choices about their own care.
  • The audit revealed high levels of satisfaction
    with their experiences 81 of carers reported
    that they had been asked to share information
    about their relative/friends likes, dislikes and
    fears 98 said that they had witnessed staff
    caring for patients in a meaningful,
    person-centred way.
  • This good practice should be shared between
    organisations.

25
  • Key messages
  • services for adults of working age

26
  • Being treated with respect and dignity, and
    given privacy and choice
  • A number of problem areas were highlighted
  • Local practices relating to the administration of
    medication
  • The involvement of patients in decision-making
    about their own care, particularly in relation to
    choice of medication and their preferred way of
    being managed in the event of their becoming
    violent
  • The involvement of patients in decision-making
    about aspects of how the ward is run, e.g.
    mealtimes, choice of menu, availability of
    refreshments outside of mealtimes, waking times.

27
  • Being offered meaningful occupation
  • Boredom was still a problem on many wards.
  • It is vital that wards address this area as a
    matter of priority measures should also be put
    in place to ensure that activities and therapies
    are reviewed regularly so that the provision is
    appropriate to the current patient and staff mix.
  • Being given adequate information
  • In the large majority of wards, staff are
    communicating effectively with patients, even
    during stressful times - such as an admission.
  • If not currently available, wards should
    consider providing written information, in a
    leaflet or on a notice board,
  • to reduce any potential confusion.

28
  • Ward communication systems and culture
  • The overall picture nationally was of cohesive,
    supportive staff teams, with well-structured
    communication systems and strong
    multi-disciplinary working. The issue of poor
    skills mix on wards was raised many times, with a
    range of underlying factors.
  • Staff training
  • Access to training relating to the prevention
    and management of violence was variable, both
    between services, and between different
    respondent groups. Areas for comment
  • training for nursing staff in undertaking
    searches
  • training for all staff in recording incidents
  • on-going competency training in observation for
    nurses
  • access for nurses to all recommended training
    related
  • to the use of rapid tranquillisation.

29
  • Supports from other colleagues
  • The majority of staff were satisfied with the
    supports they received from their team on the
    ward, though less so with supports from more
    senior managers. On wards where the staff team
    was unstable and/or there was a high reliance on
    bank and agency staff, individual team members
    were often left feeling vulnerable, unsupported,
    and unappreciated
  • The trust needs to look at the support it gives
    to the nurses they have working for them on the
    wards. Some of these wards are not a pleasant
    environment the staff are coming to with regards
    to violent/aggressive/abusive patients - who are
    obviously unwell. So they should at least make
    staff feel
  • more appreciated for the efforts they do.

30
?
31
  • Contact details
  • Maureen McGeorge
  • Royal College of Psychiatrists Centre for
    Quality Improvement
  • mmcgeorge_at_cru.rcpsych.ac.uk
  • www.rcpsych.ac.uk/nav
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