Background: Studies on medicine wards have shown that numeric pages can be disruptive of workflow and patient care. We created a quality improvement program among surgical ward nurses and residents and hypothesized that a text-based, urgency-stratified initiative would improve communication at no detriment to patient care.
Methods: Surgery residents recorded preintervention data for 1 mo including number of total pages, text pages, and numeric pages received from surgical floors. Nurses and residents completed surveys to assess preintervention satisfaction with communication, responsiveness, and workflow. Nurses were then instructed to use text paging for nonurgent issues. Paging data were again recorded for 1 mo, surveys repeated, and patient safety and satisfaction data collected. Primary endpoints evaluated included patient safety and satisfaction data. Secondary endpoints included communication satisfaction of nurses and residents.
Results: After text paging implementation, 40.1% of nonurgent pages sent from nurses to resident physicians were alphanumeric texts versus only 17.9% before implementation (P < 0.0001). There was a 19.5% reduction in the number of nonurgent numeric pages sent (P < 0.0001). Overall, 70% of nurses responded postintervention that text paging was the preferred method of contacting a physician and that the text paging initiative improved efficiency. After implementation, 62% of nurses thought that overall communication with clinicians improved. In addition, there was no change in patient safety issues or patient satisfaction.
Conclusions: Our text paging initiative for all nonurgent pages from nurses to residents improved physician-nurse workflow and communication on the surgical ward with no decrease in patient satisfaction or safety.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jss.2017.02.008 | DOI Listing |
JMIR Hum Factors
January 2025
Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine, 123 Metro Blvd, Nutley, NJ, 07110, United States, 1 7248419463.
Background: Transgender and nonbinary (TGNB) individuals are increasingly intentionally becoming pregnant to raise children, and hospital websites should reflect these trends. For prospective TGNB parents, a hospital website is the only way they can assess their safety from discrimination while receiving perinatal care. Cisnormativity enforced by communication gaps between medical institutions and TGNB patients can and has caused delays in receiving urgent care during their pregnancy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
November 2024
Department of Information Technology, Debre Markos University, Debre Markos, Ethiopia.
Now adays people express and share their opinions on various events on the internet thanks to social media. Opinion mining is the process of interpreting user-generated opinion data on social media. Aside from its lack of resources in opinion-mining tasks, Amharic presents numerous difficulties because of its complex structure and variety of dialects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
October 2024
Department of Anesthesiology, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, USA.
J Am Vet Med Assoc
January 2025
2Zoetis, Parsippany, NJ.
Objective: To explore client preferences for how value is communicated via written means and to assess the consistency of this preference with how veterinary clinic websites present this information for preventive care services.
Methods: First, a questionnaire was developed to assess clients' preference between 2 researcher-developed paragraphs recommending senior pet screening (one focused on the function of screening, the other on pet benefits of screening) and distributed from August 17 to November 2, 2023. Second, veterinary clinic websites were retrieved with a search engine using predefined search phrases related to 4 preventive care topics (flea and tick prevention, heartworm prevention, dental cleaning, and senior bloodwork).
R Soc Open Sci
October 2024
Independent Information Scientist, Oadby, Leicestershire, UK.
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