Authors

  1. Herdman, T. Heather PhD, RN
  2. Burgess, Lawrence P.A. MD
  3. Ebright, Patricia R. DNS, RN, CNS
  4. Paulson, Shirley S. MPA, RN
  5. Powell-Cope, Gail PhD, ARNP, FAAN
  6. Hancock, Holly MS, RN
  7. Wada, Edward MBA
  8. Cadman, Edwin C. MD

Abstract

Background: Increasing nursing time in patient care is beneficial in improving patient outcomes, but this is proving increasingly difficult with the nursing shortage, budgetary constraints, and higher patient acuity.

 

Objective: Nursing workflow was evaluated after the implementation of a continuous vigilance monitoring system to determine if the system enhanced patient-centric nursing care.

 

Methods: Work sampling observations were conducted at 3 hospitals for 6 categories of nursing activities (direct and indirect nursing, documentation, administrative, housekeeping, and miscellaneous) at baseline and at 3 and 9 months.

 

Results: Statistically significant increases in direct (3 months) and indirect nursing care (3 and 9 months) were found, with variability between sites. Statistically significant increases at 3 and 9 months for documentation of patient care activities and decreases in administrative activities were the most consistent findings for all sites.

 

Conclusion: Continuous vigilance monitoring enhanced patient-centric care with increases in direct and indirect nursing care and documentation of those activities.