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Partners in Care: Working with families/whaanau to encourage participation Background: A proposed change to our admission documentation, included questions.

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Presentation on theme: "Partners in Care: Working with families/whaanau to encourage participation Background: A proposed change to our admission documentation, included questions."— Presentation transcript:

1 Partners in Care: Working with families/whaanau to encourage participation Background: A proposed change to our admission documentation, included questions about which people are key to the patients well being and who is to be involved in decision making. Aims: Define partners in care Identify barriers to working in partnership with patients, family/whaanau members Develop strategy to address key barriers Contribute to the continued review of the current documentation Identify training and/or information requirements to support patients, families/whaanau and staff to work as ‘partners in care’ Method: Focused on two surgical wards at Middlemore Hospital. Surveyed surgical inpatients & family/whaanau members and staff over 1 week Conducted interviews with staff who had been patients or family/whaanau of patients over 4 weeks Reviewed surgical patient satisfaction survey narrative responses for last quarter Recruited patients and family/whaanau members for attendance at workshop event Partners in Care Forum: Full day event attended by Patients Family/whaanau members Ward Nurses Health Care Assistants Ward Clerk Physiotherapist ICU Consultant Survey Feedback: Patients are asked who are key family./whaanau members: 60% Staff say – always/mostly 33% Patients/family/whaanau say they were asked Family/whaanau members are encouraged to be at doctors rounds 76% Staff say – always/mostly 28% Patients/family/whaanau say they were encouraged Opinions of family/whaanau members are listened to and respected 84% Staff say – always/mostly 85% Patients/family/whaanau say they were satisfied Patients & family/whaanau say: Staff say: Staff would be taught how to use the document, but how do we prepare patients, family/whaanau and staff for working in partnership? Partners in Care Definition: ‘anyone named by the patient that they want to work with them (the patient) and the healthcare team to help make decisions and be involved in care’ Key concepts: partners are patient defined; members of healthcare team can support the patient to find a partner (Whaanau Support Workers, for instance) Initial area of focus: Who is involved in my care? What facilities are available? What are the routines and general processes? *The charge nurse had already extended the times the ward was ‘unlocked’ from 2pm-8pm to 8am–8pm What we tried: 1. Patient (family/whaanau) will know the name of the nurse looking after them. nurse name displayed on bedside information board Tested in 4 bed spaces Difficult to find a good place to hang the board so it could be seen Nurses sometimes forgot to update (only few boards on ward) Patients, family/whaanau really liked the board and could say who was looking after them 2. Bed space telephone number included on information board so family/whaanau could call patient direct Soon identified that only 46% of bed spaces had a telephone at the bedside Phones purchased to ensure all patients had access to phone 3. Develop process to update board at start of shift Boards to be placed at each bedside updating process to be standardised 4. Patients will be aware of facilities and ward routines Work continues to evolve pictorial information sheet for the bedside Next Steps: Develop training resources that ‘script’ key conversations and demonstrate these in action (via video scenarios, for example) to address the staff support/guidance needs as identified in the staff survey. Work to be adopted by the newly formed Patient & Whaanau Centered Care Programme Lessons: Forum was a big commitment from patients & family/whaanau members Partnership working is about changing attitudes – requires leadership Stories are a powerful means to engage staff Partners in Care Workgroup: Denise Kivell; David Hughes; Joye Rowlands; Lynne Kane; Melanie Olliff; Ian Kaihe-Wetting; Adrienne Batterton; Maika Veikune; Soli Henare; Sue Cotton; Maggie Spencer

2 Partners in Care: Working with families/whaanau to encourage participation What is the problem? Families and Whaanau are not consistently part of the ‘care team’ Some specialty areas work in partnership – Mental Health; Womens & Childrens, etc 2010 Survey showed 79% patient/whaanau respondents wanted family presence; 70% staff had concerns about ‘open access’

3 Driver for change….. November 2011, Multidisciplinary Collaborative Care Plan, to be piloted Patient to be asked: – Who are the key people, family or whaanau you wish to be involved in care and treatment decisions? – Who would you like to be present at the ward round? ‘Partners-in-care’ concept introduced

4 Aims: To define ‘Partners-in-care’ Identify barriers to working in partnership with patients, family/whaanau members Develop strategy to address key barriers Contribute to the continued review of the current documentation Identify training and/or information requirements to support patients, families/whaanau and staff to work as ‘partners in care’

5 Method Focused on two surgical wards Surveyed surgical inpatients & family/whaanau members and staff over 1 week Conducted interviews with staff who had been patients or family/whaanau of patients over 4 weeks Reviewed surgical patient satisfaction survey narrative responses for last quarter Recruited patients and family/whaanau members for attendance at Forum

6 Key survey findings…. 20 patients; 25 staff – 2 surgical wards Staff made patient/family/whaanau feel ‘welcome’ 60% staff ask who are key family/whaanau to be involved in care; 67% patients say they weren’t asked 76% staff encourage key family/whaanau to be at doctors rounds; 28% patients informed they were ‘welcome’ at ward rounds

7 Key survey findings…. What could we improve? Enable my family/whaanau to be with me (44%) Explain my options (35%) Staff support/guidance? Support families is stressful situations (55%) Involve pts/whaanau in care/treatment decisions (55%) Strategies for working with large families (41%) 12% staff confident working with patients and family/whaanau

8 Partners in Care Forum Partners in care definition: ‘anyone named by the patient that they want to work with them (the patient) and the healthcare team to help make decisions and be involved in care’ Key concepts: partners are patient defined; members of healthcare team can support the patient to find a partner (Whaanau Support Workers, for instance)

9 Initial area of focus: Who is involved in my care? What facilities are available? What are the routines and general processes? The charge nurse extended the times the ward was ‘unlocked’ from 2pm-8pm to 8am–8pm

10 Tests… Patient information boards – 4 bed spaces initially – Process for updating – Patients/families liked them Bedside phones – All bed spaces have phones Information boards being rolled out to all bed spaces Pictorial bedside information sheet

11 Lessons.…. Dealing with attitudes – Leadership is key – Anxiety - apparent conflicts between what is law; policy & right thing to do Forum as a means of engagement – Huge commitment – Other ways to engage to be explored – eg. EBD Staff as patients/whaanau – how do they provide feedback?

12 Next stage….. Key message: family/whaanau not visitors – Newly formed Patient & Whaanau Centered Care Board Development of support guidance – Adopted as work stream – Offers of help to establish


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