Objectives: Whiteboards are a valuable tool used to facilitate communication between families and the care team, but they were underused in our institution. Our aim was to increase families' knowledge of their child's plan of care, safety plan, and medical care team names by increasing the use of patient whiteboards with inpatient populations at a freestanding quaternary care children's hospital.

Methods: With this quality improvement study, we redesigned the whiteboard template to address the following 4 main barriers to use: (1) not having enough space to explain concepts to families, (2) having too much information to complete, (3) unclear roles of who completes the whiteboard, and (4) forgetting to update the whiteboard. We focused the content of the new template on critical information the family needed to know, assigned roles to make it easy to know who filled out which section, and used plain language.

Results: The use of each whiteboard section on the old templates ( = 92) versus new templates ( = 424) were compared. Use increased for all sections (plan of care [48.9% to 71.6%; = .008], safety plan [4.3% to 22.8%; ≤ .001], medical team [85.8% to 87.6%; = .068], nurse's name [94.5% to 98.8%; = .031]). After the template redesign, 85.8% of families knew the plan of care, 32.3% knew the safety plan, 61.5% knew the medical team's name, and 92.8% knew the nurse's name.

Conclusions: After the implementation of a new whiteboard template, we significantly increased the use of patient whiteboards and demonstrated improvement in families' knowledge of the plan of care with inpatient populations at a freestanding quaternary care children's hospital.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/hpeds.2017-0174DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

plan care
16
patient whiteboards
12
safety plan
12
care
9
quality improvement
8
improvement study
8
care team
8
families' knowledge
8
inpatient populations
8
populations freestanding
8

Similar Publications

Background: Patient engagement is a critical but challenging public health priority in behavioral health care. During telehealth sessions, health care providers need to rely predominantly on verbal strategies rather than typical nonverbal cues to effectively engage patients. Hence, the typical patient engagement behaviors are now different, and health care provider training on telehealth patient engagement is unavailable or quite limited.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: Peripheral intravenous catheter (PIVC) failure occurs in approximately 50% of insertions. Unexpected PIVC failure leads to treatment delays, longer hospitalizations, and increased risk of patient harm. In current practice there is no method to predict if PIVC failure will occur until it is too late and a grossly obvious complication has occurred.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Feedback literacy (FBL) is a critical skill for learners encompassing four behaviors: appreciating feedback, making judgements, managing affect, and taking action. Little guidance has been available for clinical preceptors to promote FBL. The R2C2 feedback and coaching model that guides teachers through building Relationships, exploring Reactions and Reflections, discussing Content and Coaching to co-develop an action plan for follow-up may support FBL.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Teleguided photocoagulation treatments across continents with a remotely programmed laser for retinal diseases.

Ther Adv Ophthalmol

January 2025

Department of Experimental Medicine, Ophthalmology Unit, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Via Montpellier 1, Rome, 00133, Italy.

Diabetic retinopathy and retinal vein occlusion represent two prevalent vision-threatening retinal diseases. Retinal laser therapy still plays an important role in treating these conditions, but its successful administration often requires referral to specialized centers and retina experts. It is, therefore, essential to develop a new treatment methodology that enables patients to benefit from the expertise of specialists from reference centers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Chronic low back pain (CLBP), or low back pain lasting greater than 12 weeks, is a prevalent condition that profoundly impacts the quality of life in affected individuals. Traditional treatments - such as physical therapy, medications, injections, minimally invasive procedures, and surgery - often prove ineffective in a considerable number of cases, particularly when utilized as singular modalities. Given the complex biopsychosocial nature of CLBP, a multi-modality approach tailored to each patients' unique needs is essential.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!