Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Update on Phase II of NCSBN’s Transition to Practice Study NCSBN Long-Term Care Conference August 24, 2011 Josephine Silvestre, MSN, RN Nancy Spector,

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Update on Phase II of NCSBN’s Transition to Practice Study NCSBN Long-Term Care Conference August 24, 2011 Josephine Silvestre, MSN, RN Nancy Spector,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Update on Phase II of NCSBN’s Transition to Practice Study NCSBN Long-Term Care Conference August 24, 2011 Josephine Silvestre, MSN, RN Nancy Spector, PhD, RN Associate, Regulatory Innovations

2

3 2009 New Nurse: “I am frightened for my patients and for my own license as I soon will be turned loose with only a resource person and expected to take a full load after only 5 days of orientation in my new assigned unit.” - NC Transition Study

4 Background… NCSBN 2002 & 2004 Employer Studies: “Yes definitely” to survey question regarding novice graduates being prepared to provide safe and effective care:  45% (2002) & 48.8% (2004)-diploma graduates  40% (2002) & 41.9% (2004)- BSN graduates  35% (2002) & 41.9% (2004)- ADN graduates  30% (2002) & 32.9% (2004)- PN graduates

5 Background… Advisory Board Company (2008) Surveyed  5,700 frontline nurse leaders  400 nursing deans/directors/chairs

6 Background…  90% academic leaders believe their new students are prepared.  10% of health system nurse leaders believe new nurses are prepared.

7 Advisory Board Study Biggest Improvement Needed:  Follow up  Initiative  Quality improvement  Time management  Tracking multiple responsibilities  Conflict resolution  Delegation

8 Background…  NCSBN hosted the Transition Forum February 22, 2007  Speakers from other disciplines and countries all came together.  Various research findings showed need for transition programs.  Stakeholders agreed to a standardized regulatory model (AACN, AONE, ANA, NAPNES, NLN)

9 The Perfect Storm Brewing…  Expertise gap (Orsolini-Hain & Malone)  10% staff are new graduates  50% turnover from 2011-2020 (Dracup & Morrris, 2007)

10 Practice Expectations: Hit the Ground Running!

11

12 Transition to Practice: A Missing Piece in Nursing

13 Lack of Transition Programs Affect Safety and Quality  Patient safety  Competency  Retention

14 Visual Model

15 It’s a Collaborative Model

16 Modules

17 Illinois, North Carolina and Ohio are the Study States: 113 sites

18 Transition to Practice Study Longitudinal, randomized, multi- site study comparing patient outcomes in organizations that use our transition model versus those that use their traditional method.

19 Unique Study of Transition 1.Actual patient outcomes 2. Randomization to study or control group

20 Research Advisory Panel Participants 1.Jane Barnsteiner, PhD, RN, FAAN – University of Pennsylvania 2.Mary Blegen, PhD, RN, FAAN – UCSF 3.Mary Lynn, PhD, RN – University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 4.Elizabeth Ulrich, EdD, RN, FACHE, FAAN – Versant 5.Louis Fogg, PhD – Rush College of Nursing

21 Research Objectives Primary:  To determine whether newly licensed nurses’ participation in NCSBN’s TTP model improves safety and quality outcomes Secondary:  To determine how well the preceptor module prepares preceptors for their role  To identify the challenges, and potential solutions, of implementing the NCSBN transition model  To determine cost/benefit analysis

22

23 Survey Measurement Tools New Nurse Surveys  Demographics  Competency – NEC & QSEN  Satisfaction – Modified Brayfield & Rothe  Practice issues – NCSBN  Preceptorship experience – National Institute of Health (NIH) and North Carolina Foundation for Nursing Excellence

24 Survey Measurement Tools Preceptor Surveys  Demographics  Competency – NEC & QSEN  Preceptorship experience – NIH and North Carolina Foundation for Nursing Excellence

25 Phase I Patient Outcomes  Patient falls with and without injury  Postoperative thromboemboli  Hospital acquired pressure ulcers  Patient satisfaction with nursing care

26 Phase I Patient Outcomes  Catheter associated UTI  Central line associated blood stream infections  Failure to rescue  Medication administration errors  LOS

27 Data Collection  Web-based data collection system  Surveys/evaluations  Knowledge assessments  Hospital outcomes data

28 Confidentiality  Participants will receive individual password-protected access to the website  Information collected from new nurses, preceptors, nurse managers  Outcomes data entered by site coordinators will be kept confidential; data will be reported in aggregate

29 Phase I - Randomization to Model or Control Stratified by:  Rural, suburban, urban  Numbers of new nurses  Number of sites

30 Phase I – June 2011  Educate institutions regarding TTP study  Obtain informed consent and enroll preceptors & their nurse managers  Preceptors (intervention group) completed training module  Complete surveys

31 Phase I – July 2011  Obtain informed consent & enroll new graduate nurses  Complete measurement tools  Demographic & Initial surveys  Knowledge Assessment  Initiate interactive online modules  To be completed within 3 months of start date  Each module will take approximately 6-10 hours

32 Phase II  Applications are being accepted for Phase II in Ohio, Illinois and North Carolina  External validity  RNs and LPNs in settings other than hospitals  Long-term care, community-based facilities, ambulatory care, etc.

33 Long-Term Care Facilities  Assisted living  Nursing homes  Rehab centers  Skilled nursing care centers

34 Community-Based Facilities  Home health  Public health  Visiting nurses

35 Ambulatory-Care Facilities  Free-standing urgent care  Free-standing surgical centers  Health care provider offices

36 Transition to Practice Website Located at: www.transitiontopractice.org

37 Timeline

38 The Future!!

39 Questions


Download ppt "Update on Phase II of NCSBN’s Transition to Practice Study NCSBN Long-Term Care Conference August 24, 2011 Josephine Silvestre, MSN, RN Nancy Spector,"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google