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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

Evaluation of the Bedside Swallow Screen

Ben, Ruby 01 January 2018 (has links)
Dysphagia is a leading complication of a stroke. A nurse-driven bedside swallow screen can identify dysphagia and decrease the risk for complications such as aspiration pneumonia. At the project site, the use of the bedside swallow screen was at 33%; there was noncompliance with the use of the bedside swallow screen by the emergency department nurses. The purpose of the doctoral project was to increase the use of the bedside swallow screen. Published outcomes, research, and reports generated from archived data were the sources of evidence. The six sigma methodology was used to inform the quality improvement doctoral project. At the end of the quality improvement project, the posttest scores were statistically significantly higher than the pretest scores mean. The nurses' scores demonstrating level of confidence before the training (M = 68.39, SD = 10.86) were lower than scores indicating their level of confidence after the training (M = 79.55, SD = 10.56), and the paired t test showed statistical significance p < .001. The training made a statistically significant difference in the emergency department nurses' knowledge and confidence in performing the dysphagia screen. After the causes of low compliance were identified, strategies developed and implementation of the swallow screen in the emergency department increased. The quality improvement project improved the use of the dysphagia screen at the project site from 33% to 60%. The project made a positive impact on social change by reducing stroke patients' risk for complications.
2

Improving Bedside Swallow Screening in Acute Stroke Patients: An Evaluation Plan

Segree, Juliette 01 January 2016 (has links)
A stroke is a life-changing event for a patient and his or her family. The acute stroke patient is at risk for developing aspiration pneumonia, whether silent or overt. Prevention of pneumonia in this population requires timely completion and documentation of the bedside swallow screen to identify those patients at risk for aspiration pneumonia; however, anecdotal data from the emergency department at the site of this project suggested that completion and documentation of the screening were inconsistent. Guided by the quality caring model adopted by the project site as well as the logic model, the aim of this project was to evaluate emergency room nurses' compliance with documentation after completing a modified bedside swallow screening. To facilitate documentation compliance, the current bedside screening tool was modified to make it user friendly. Electronic records of stroke patients (n = 104) admitted to the emergency room were monitored for a period of 6 months after implementing the modified bedside swallow screening tool. The findings indicate that implementing the modified bedside swallow screening tool achieved 93% documentation compliance in the electronic records and 100% documentation in patient charts over this 6-month period and clearly identified patients at risk for developing aspiration pneumonia. Further study is recommended to determine the relationship between the results of the modified bedside swallow screening and the development of hospital-acquired pneumonia. Implementation of this modified bedside swallow screening tool can initiate therapeutic measures to reduce the incidence of aspiration pneumonia in the acute stroke patient, resulting in shorter length of hospitalization and reduced health care costs.

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