Title: Patient%20Care%20Delivery
1Patient Care Delivery
- Chapter 5- Colleen Person
2Patient Care Delivery System
- A template for organizing and providing care to
patients. - The delivery system used is one of the most
powerful tools a manager has in creating an
environment of stability, with increased
predictability and decreased uncertainty being
by-products. (Marie Manthey) - The purpose is to establish a therapeutic
relationship between nurses and
patients/families. - The most effective care delivery systems are
those designed with the patient always held in
the highest regard.
3Bureaucratic Nursing vs. Professional Nursing
- Nation wide movement from a task based view of
care delivery to a principles-based, holistic
view. - Bureaucratic nursing tasks drives activities,
cure of disease, focus is on physical,
diagnosis-centered care, policies and procedures
drive decision making, rules, habits and routines
determine nurses behavior
4Professional Nursing
- Knowledge based, healing is the goal, focus is on
holistic care, professional standards and current
research drive decision making, critical thinking
and innovation determine nurses behavior. - Studies show that nursing care is the most
important predictor of overall patient
satisfaction with their hospital care
5Designing Delivery Systems
- The authors base care delivery design on the
following - Purpose- caring for patients/families
- Most effective when we know what matters most to
each patient/family - Patients share more when they feel safe
- Continuity of care improves productivity,
efficiency, and patient and staff satisfaction - Each element needs to be clearly defined
6Elements of Care Delivery Systems
- Nurse/patient relationship and decision making
clearly define RAA - How long does a relationship last between nurse
and patient? - Work allocation/patient assignments
- How are staff scheduling, patient assignments,
and delegation of care activities achieved?
7Elements cont.
- Communication between members of the health care
team standards of communication - Addresses values, beliefs, and group norms
- Management of unit /environment of care unit
manager creates the culture of care - When all four elements are clearly defined a
delivery system can function efficiently and
effectively
8Four Care Delivery Systems and When They Started.
- Functional nursing (50s-60s)
- Team nursing (mid 60s mid 70s)
- Total patient care (late 60s)
- Primary nursing (Univ. of Minn. 1968-69)
9Functional Nursing
- Decision making occurs over a single shift and
made by charge nurse/nurse mgr. - Tasks are divided among members
- Med adm, treatments, ADLs, vital signs
- Focus was on getting tasks done, not on
establishing relationships - Communication is hierarchical, nurses report to
charge nurse and charge nurse communicates with
other team members. - Mgrs. Function as overseers. Are tasks completed?
10Team Nursing
- Decision making over a single shift, by team
leader or nurse mgr. - Role of the RN is to carry out more complex
tasks, while delegating and supervising team
members who are given other tasks. - Focus is on completion of tasks, assignments
change based on pt location, acuity, and
complexity. - Communication is hierarchical, nurses report to
team leader who reports to physicians and team
members. - Nurse mgr. supervises team leader.
- Was very useful when LPNs also work the unit
11Total Patient Care
- Decision making occurs over a single shift- by RN
after being assigned by the nurse mgr. - Assignments are patient based with RN providing
activities of care. - Assignments may vary by shift based on location,
pt acuity, does not support continuity of care. - Communication is usually direct but is sometimes
done through a charge nurse. - Mgrs. Serve as a resource and promote stronger
role of RN in care decisions. - RN does not have responsibility for creating or
implementing a plan for the continuity of the
patients care over time.
12Primary Nursing
- RN makes the decision for patients based on
therapeutic relationship. - Relationship is sustained for length of stay
- Assignments ensure continuity of care.
- Associate nurse takes care of pt when primary is
not there. - Communication is direct. Primary nurse is
responsible for integrating information and
coordinating care. - Mgrs. Promote nurse/pt relationship. Create a
healthy work environment and empower staff.
13Role of RN in Primary Nursing
- RNs clearly accept responsibility for decision
making regarding pt care, authority, and
accountability. - Determine and prioritizes needs of the pt/family,
establishes an individualized plan of care,
delegates tasks. - Communicates and coordinates needs with other
members of the health care team. - RBC has evolved from the basic tenet of Primary
nursing.
14Partners in practice-New Concept
- RN, LPN, CNA agree to partner with one another
in the provision of the activities of care. - They choose to work together with consistent
scheduling, building relationship, and focused
around patient needs. - RN is responsible for developing the knowledge
and skill of his/her team - It can work with the 12 hour shift, and supports
continuity of care - Reduces turnover of RNs, improves patient
quality, promotes professional nursing.
15Myths about Primary Nursing
- It requires an All RN staff nurse extenders play
a vital role in meeting needs of
patients/families. - The primary nurse does all the bedside care
their role is to accept RAA. It is not practical
for RN to do all of bedside care. - Primary nursing eliminates teamwork. You only
know your patients this model is based on a
shared commitment to all patients. The nurse must
work collaboratively. - Complex scheduling requirements prohibit
continuity of the nurse-patient-relationship
central to the primary care model scheduling
must be creative. Nurses report perceived
increase in productivity when continuity of care
is supported.
16Are all primary nursing models the same?
- Systems must be customized to what works for that
individual organization. - Each organization determines the best terminology
with which to clarify RAA. - The organization identifies key principles of
each of the four elements
17Role of the Consumer
- Health care consumers are becoming increasingly
educated about nursing care and staffing issues. - Find out the RN to patient ratio is managed by
the acuity of the patients (Some suggest no
greater than 14) - Check also the ratio of RNs to LPNs
- Study the facilitys report card. (Leepfrog,
JCAHO reports) - Locate the nearest Magnet Hospital
18Magnet Status
- Magnet hospitals have demonstrated Ability to
retain well qualified nursing staff provide
higher quality care decrease error rates
decrease morbidity and mortality Improved
pt/family satisfaction (Aiken, Clarke, Sloane,
Sochalski, Silber, 2002 Ingersoll, Schultz,
Hoffart, Ryan, 1996 Prescott, 1993 Scott et
al., 1999) - Three goals of the Magnet Program
- Promoting quality in a setting that supports
professional practice - Identifying excellence in the delivery of nursing
services to patients/residents and - Disseminating best practices in nursing
services.
19Forces of magnetism
- Evolved out of a study conducted by the American
Academy of Nursings Task Force - ANCC provides programs and credentialing services
to hospitals desiring to achieve Magnet Status
http//www.nursecredentialing.org/ - All of the standards are grounded in therapeutic,
continuous relationship between the RN and
patient.
20Forces of Magnetism
- Quality of Nursing Leadership
- Organizational Structure
- Management Style
- Personal Policies and Programs
- Professional Models of Care
- Quality of Care
- Quality Improvement
- Consultation and Resources
- Autonomy
- Community and the Hospital
- Nurses as Teachers
- Image of Nursing
- Collegial Nurse-Physician Relationships
- Professional Development
21Transformational Leadership
- Forces 1 3
- today's leaders are required to transform their
organization's values, beliefs, and behaviors. - This requires vision, influence, clinical
knowledge, and a strong expertise relating to
professional nursing practice. It also
acknowledges that transformation may create
turbulence and involve atypical approaches to
solutions. - The organization's senior leadership team creates
the vision for the future, and the systems and
environment necessary to achieve that vision.
They must enlighten the organization as to why
change is necessary, and communicate each
department's part in achieving that change.
22Structural Empowerment
- Forces 2, 4, 10, 12, 14
- Staff need to be developed, directed, and
empowered to find the best way to accomplish the
organizational goals and achieve desired
outcomes. - This is accomplished through the organization's
strategic plan, structure, systems, policies, and
programs - This may be accomplished through a variety of
structures and programs one size does not fit
all.
23Exemplary Professional Practice
- Forces 5, 8, 9, 11, 13
- This entails a comprehensive understanding of the
role of nursing the application of that role
with patients, families, communities, and the
interdisciplinary team and the application of
new knowledge and evidence. - The goal of this Component is more than the
establishment of strong professional practice it
is what that professional practice can achieve.
24New Knowledge, Innovation, Improvements
- Force 7
- Magnet organizations have an ethical and
professional responsibility to contribute to
patient care, the organization, and the
profession in terms of new knowledge,
innovations, and improvements. - This Component includes new models of care,
application of existing evidence, new evidence,
and visible contributions to the science of
nursing.
25Empirical Quality Results
- Force 6
- Magnet-recognized organizations are in a unique
position to become pioneers of the future and to
demonstrate solutions to numerous problems
inherent in our healthcare systems today. - They may do this in a variety of ways through
innovative structure and various processes, and
they ought to be recognized, not penalized, for
their inventiveness. - clinical outcomes related to nursing workforce
outcomes patient and consumer outcomes and
organizational outcomes