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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Managing Clinical Handover Processes for Cardiology Patients Using BPM

Alghamdi, Amal January 2015 (has links)
Health-care delivery involves clinical handover processes that occur at many levels of inpatient care. These processes are essential to an effective health-care system due to their role in achieving efficient communication, reducing transmission time, and lowering costs. Ensuring safe and effective handover requires the coordination of multiple care providers that work together to deliver patient care efficiently. Poor coordination during handover can have major effects on patient care, leading to loss of information and contributing to adverse events. As health-care delivery evolves to become more patient-centered, handovers from short- to long-term care need to maintain a strong communication, which in turn will depend on the evolution of support systems for that communication. Due to the wide range of care providers and patient needs, there has so far been a lack of research work on handover processes. This study aims to explore the clinical handover process for patients moving from a cardiology unit to home and community care settings, and how they are affected by varying degrees of communication. It relies on literature review and a case study conducted at Montfort Hospital, Ontario, to identify and analyze the major factors involved in this type of handover, and to form suggestions about how this process could be improved. This thesis analyzes process scenarios arising in the case study, modeling them using business process management (BPM) tools and techniques to identify problems and formulate solutions. A model of the existing process is created and analyzed using business process management notation (BPMN), and is then subjected to analysis, the results of which identify several communication issues with a potential to cause delays and information loss. The findings highlight the importance of collaboration among care providers, and indicate the potential uses of BPM methodology to choreograph that collaboration. The study ultimately shows how improvements to collaboration and information exchange can increase the communication effectiveness in handover processes and reduce the probability of adverse patient events.
2

The Use of a Standardized System of Communication to Change the Perception of Handoff Communication in a Psychiatric Setting

Plunkett, Alicia Renee' 01 January 2015 (has links)
The Use of a Standardized System of Communication to Change the Perception of Handoff Communication in a Psychiatric Setting by Alicia Renee' Plunkett MSN, Walden University 2007 MSHA, University of St. Francis, 2005 BSN, University of Memphis, 1995 Project Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Nursing Practice Walden University December 2014 The Joint Commission's review of sentinel events indicated that communication errors were the cause of over 65% of the sentinel events occurring in healthcare. The nursing profession has the responsibility of providing 24-hour care in an acute care setting and nurses are thus the primary participants in the handoff communication process. The purpose of this project was to assess the nursing staff's perception of handoff and to create a process for handoff communication. The most common framework for correcting communication errors in the literature is the Situation, Background, Assessment, and Recommendation framework, which was used as a guide for developing a process and form for handoff in this facility. The "Clinical Handover Staff Survey" developed by O'Connell, MacDonald, and Kelly (2008) was modified for use in this study. This survey was distributed to nurses and mental health technicians in 2 acute care units within a standalone acute care psychiatric hospital (n = 140). The quantitative survey identified 3 common barriers to the process in this facility that included: (a) interruptions, (b) subjective terminology used to describe patients, and (c) the lack of confidence in the information presented. After the implementation of a new process and form, the staff members were resurveyed to measure their post implementation perceptions of the handoff process. In each of the 3 areas measured, the implementation of a new process and form allowed the facility to see changes in the staffs' perceptions of the handoff process. The changes seen in this facility further indicate the need for education, standardization, and a continued focus on improving and mastering the important task of handoff communication. Improving handoff communication prevents errors in patient care from occurring, therefore decreasing mortality and morbidity rates.

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