Keywords

hospital rounds, interprofessional care, relational coordination

 

Authors

  1. Blakeney, Erin Abu-Rish
  2. Ali, Hebatallah Naim
  3. Summerside, Nicole
  4. Lavallee, Danielle C.
  5. Kragen, Benjamin
  6. Willgerodt, Mayumi A.
  7. Weiner, Bryan J.
  8. Spacciante, Leah
  9. Zierler, Brenda K.

Abstract

Background: Poor communication is a leading cause of errors in health care. Structured interprofessional bedside rounds are a promising model to improve communication.

 

Purpose: The aim of the study was to test if an intervention to improve communication and coordination in an inpatient heart failure care unit would result in lasting change.

 

Methodology/Approach: The relational coordination (RC) survey was administered to seven workgroups (i.e., nurses, physicians) at baseline (2015) and three subsequent years following the intervention (team training, leadership development workshops, and structured interprofessional bedside round implementation). Descriptive analysis and mixed-effects models were used to assess the impact of the intervention on improving RC.

 

Results: During the study period (2015-2018), 344 participants completed the survey for an overall response rate of 53.5% (n = 643). Postintervention, the RC index significantly increased from 3.79 to 4.08 (p < .001) and remained significantly higher over 2 years, with an RC index of 4.12 and 4.04, respectively (p < .001). The range of RC scores between and within workgroups narrowed over time, with nonrotating workgroups showing the most improvements.

 

Conclusion: Findings indicate that positive changes as a result of the intervention have been sustained, despite high rates of turnover among all workgroups. Notably, positive change in RC was found to be more pronounced for nonrotating workgroups compared to team members who rotate within the hospital (i.e., pharmacists who rotate to other units every month).

 

Practice Implications: This intervention holds promise for teams seeking best practice models of "high-reliability" care organization and delivery. Sustained changes from this intervention represent an important area of future practice-based research.