WE CARE 4 KIDS: Use of a Rounding Tool in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit

To implement a daily rounding tool in a pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) to improve the discussion performance of identified clinical elements. We hypothesized that a semi-structured rounding tool created by a multidisciplinary team would be successfully implemented and sustained in the PICU. A...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pediatric quality & safety 2017-11, Vol.2 (6), p.e044-e044
Hauptverfasser: Ganesan, Rani, Rajakumar, Priya, Fogg, Louis, Silvestri, Jean, Kane, Jason M.
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container_end_page e044
container_issue 6
container_start_page e044
container_title Pediatric quality & safety
container_volume 2
creator Ganesan, Rani
Rajakumar, Priya
Fogg, Louis
Silvestri, Jean
Kane, Jason M.
description To implement a daily rounding tool in a pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) to improve the discussion performance of identified clinical elements. We hypothesized that a semi-structured rounding tool created by a multidisciplinary team would be successfully implemented and sustained in the PICU. A pre-post interventional study was conducted in a multidisciplinary medical-surgical PICU. Baseline data collection of undisclosed clinical elements was performed by covert observers, which resulted in the development of a comprehensive, nurse-driven rounding checklist. Frequencies of pre- and postintervention metrics were assessed after implementation, and sustainability was assessed at 5 years. Six months after implementation, 70% (7/10) of checklist elements demonstrated significant improvement. Five years after implementation, 172 of a possible 222 (74%) checklists were collected. Eighty percentage (8/10) of the measures sustained discussion frequency after 5 years of use. Nursing presence significantly improved at year 5 compared with the preimplementation period. Nursing satisfaction surveys distributed at year 5 showed that the rounding tool was useful and nurses were confident in understanding care plans at the end of rounds. Ninety-eight percentage of checklists revealed discrete transcription of qualitative daily goals. A semi-structured rounding tool created by a multidisciplinary team was successfully implemented, and performance was sustained at 5 years. This initiative led to improved bedside nursing presence during patient care rounds.
doi_str_mv 10.1097/pq9.0000000000000044
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subjects Individual QI Projects from Single Institutions
title WE CARE 4 KIDS: Use of a Rounding Tool in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit
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