Intentional rounding in hospital wards: What works, for whom and in what circumstances?

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Intentional rounding in hospital wards: What works, for whom and in what circumstances? Ruth Harris, Sarah Sims, Nigel Davies, Ros Levenson, Stephen Gourlay and Fiona Ross RCN International Research Conference April 5 th 2017, Oxford, UK iona Ross

Intentional rounding in hospital wards: What works, for whom and in what circumstances? Ruth Harris, Principal Investigator Sarah Sims, Project Co-ordinator and Co-applicant Felicity Mayer, Research Assistant Nigel Davies, Specialist in Healthcare Leadership Katy Schnitzler, formerly Research Assistant Ros Levenson, Co-applicant Stephen Gourlay, Co-applicant Fiona Ross, Co-applicant Sally Brearley, Collaborator Robert Grant, Collaborator Giampiero Favato, Collaborator This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research Health Services & Delivery Research (NIHR HS&DR) Programme as part of their After Francis call (project number 13/07/87). The views and opinions expressed therein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the NIHR HS&DR Programme, NHS or the Department of Health. Please note that these are confidential preliminary findings of the study and are not for wider circulation.

What is Intentional Rounding?

. regular interaction and engagement between nurses and patients and those close to them should be systematised though regular ward rounds (Francis Report, Vol III, Recommendation 238, p1610)

So what s the evidence?

Intentional rounding in hospital wards: What works, for whom and in what circumstances? Phase 1: Realist synthesis Phase 2: National survey of all NHS acute trusts in England Phase 3: Case studies Phase 4: Accumulative data analysis

Realist synthesis Stage 1: Identify theories or assumptions about why/how intentional rounding works or is expected to work. 89 documents included. 8 programme theories identified. Stage 2: Identify empirical research to support/refute theories identified in stage 1 or identify any new ones. 44 documents included.

8 theories of intentional rounding Allocated time to care Visibility of nurses Nurse-patient communication and relationships Consistency and comprehensiveness Accountability Anticipation of needs Staff communication Patient empowerment

1. Allocated time to care

2. Visibility of nurses

3. Nurse-patient communication and relationships

4. Consistency and comprehensiveness

5. Accountability

6. Anticipation of needs

7. Staff communication

8. Patient empowerment

Findings 44 papers reviewed. peer reviewed journals (n=18), professional press (n=21), four study reports a doctoral thesis. USA (n=25) UK (n=12) Australia (n=5), Canada and Iran (1 paper each).

Mechanism 1: Consistency and comprehensiveness (n=21) IR helped staff remember to conduct all aspects of care on every round and identify tasks that might otherwise be missed. Helped guide junior/unqualified staff and staff less familiar with the patient. Enabled staff to regularly speak to all patients, not just those identified as higher risk. Context Strategies in place to reinforce adherence to process (e.g. education, observations) Suitability of IR documentation Outcome Reassuring to staff, patients and carers Evidence not clear about clinical outcomes, incidence of call bells

MCO

However. Rounds not consistently carried out by all nurses or for all patients or nurses not conducting IR according to the recommended protocol. Nurses used clinical judgement and professional autonomy to modify rounding process, assessing patients on an individual basis and making informed choices about how frequently to conduct rounds and what questions to ask. Context Ward setting Individual staff characteristics Lack of clarity around when/by whom rounds should be delivered Lack of time/low staffing/conflicting priorities Outcomes Staff feel silly /uncomfortable Patients refuse to participate in rounding

MCO

Mechanism 2: Accountability (n=19) Original definition of mechanism partially supported by empirical evidence, with accountability perceived as underpinning IR in some studies However, staff accountability for rounding seemed to focus upon the completion of IR documentation rather than upon the ability to carry out high quality IR No evidence that increased personal accountability led to the delivery of higher standards of care. IR may be more a means of offering assurance to key stakeholders (eg. patients, relatives, nurses, managers) about the care being delivered

Example of a CMO configuration associated with the presence of the accountability mechanism Qualitative research study comprised of 3 focus groups (9 nurses and 6 nursing and midwifery managers/educators working in either aged care or maternity units in one Australian hospital): Context: Confused patient unable to recall receiving care. Accountability mechanism present: IR documentation is recalled and used to demonstrate that care had been provided. Outcome: Family members feel reassured. Confused patient unable to recall receiving care [C] IR documentation recalled and used to demonstrate care provided [M present] Family members reassured [O+] As highlighted in Flowers (2016)

Mechanism 3: Nurse-patient communication/ relationships Original definition partially supported by empirical evidence: Widely reported that IR did increase the frequency of communication between nurses, patients and family members but less evidence that it improved communication. Staff believed that increased communication was welcomed by patients and family, making them feel more involved in care, more likely to voice concerns and less likely to feel ignored/neglected. However, for some patients, it was the quality and meaningfulness of their interactions with staff that were important and IR did not always facilitate this: I just want them to speak friendly, not ask questions about my pain and drinks (Patient. Kenny, 2015, p18) We don t have conversations, we just answer questions (Patient. Kenny, 2015, p18)

Example of a MCO configuration associated with the presence of the nurse-patient communication/relationships mechanism Two-stage pilot project with participatory methods undertaken to introduce IR as a service improvement initiative in nursing and midwifery at 2 general hospitals within 1 NHS Healthcare Trust in England. Findings were based upon the results of a staff evaluation questionnaire sent to clinical managers and matrons. Context: Outpatient area with unavoidable delayed waiting times. Communication mechanism present: IR offers opportunity for patients to be advised every hour about delays and waiting times, enabling them to feel able to go and get refreshments whilst they wait. Outcomes: Patient complaints are reduced. Outpatient setting with unavoidable delayed waiting times [C] Patients are informed every hour about delays and waiting times so that they feel able to go and get refreshments whilst they wait [M present] Less patient complaints about waiting times [O+] As highlighted in Dewing and O Meara (2012).

Discussion and conclusions what aspects of IR work, for whom and in what circumstances What aspects of IR work? Frequent, structured approach to delivering fundamental care is reassuring for some patients For whom? patients who need more help, are quieter or are reassured simply by seeing nurses regularly In what context? when there are sufficient nurses to conduct IR / workload is manageable BUT what does not work?

Discussion and conclusions what aspects of IR work, for whom and in what circumstances What aspects of IR work? Having to sign IR documentation after each round makes some nurses feel more personally accountable For whom? nurses who understand the purpose of the IR process and have bought in to the concept In what context? when there are sufficient nurses to conduct IR / workload is manageable, IR documentation is fit for purpose and at easy reach at the patient bedside BUT what does not work?

Discussion and conclusions what aspects of IR work, for whom and in what circumstances What aspects of IR work? Completed IR documentation can monitor what care has been delivered or documented For whom? nurse managers who need to demonstrate that care has been delivered In what context? in response to patient relative query, complaint or untoward incident BUT what does not work?

Discussion and conclusions - outstanding questions in refining the explanatory theory Flexibility of approach Should the implementation of IR be delivered in structured, standardised manner to all patients or targeted at particular patients depending on their need? If a flexible approach to IR is undertaken: For which patients, in what circumstances and how does IR demonstrate greatest success? Whom is best suited to determine patients suitability for IR? How flexible can the approach to the delivery of IR be before it can no longer be considered IR? If a more structured, systematic approach is undertaken: How does approach that treats all patients the same encourage individualised and compassionate care?

Discussion and conclusions - outstanding questions in refining the explanatory theory Nurse-patient interactions Is IR proposed as a tool for increasing the frequency of nurse-patient communication, improving the quality/meaningfulness of nurse-patient interactions or both? Whilst it is clear to see how ensuring that a nurse speaks hourly with every patient would increase the frequency of nurse-patient communications, can such a structured and prescriptive approach ever facilitate more meaningful interactions?

Contact details/for more information Prof Ruth Harris Ruth.ris@sgul.kingston.ac.uk King's College London Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery Room 2.24, James Clerk Maxwell Building 57 Waterloo Road SE1 8WA Email: ruth.harris@kcl.ac.ukh.harriskcl.ac.uk Tel: 020 7848 3708 www.kcl.ac.uk Twitter: @Nursing_Rounds 0 7848 370www.kcl.ac.uk 2016 King s College London. All rights reserved