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Volume 4

Journal of Community & Public Health Nursing

Page 20

conference

series

.com

September 19-20, 2018 Singapore

7

th

International Conference on

Public Health and Nursing

Public Health Nursing 2018

September 19-20, 2018

How unified communication improves patient care and safety

H

ospital communication has become exceedingly complex with multiple and disparate systems. Too often, physiological

monitors, beds, IV pumps, ventilators, and other systems sound alarms or send messages to clinical staff that are not

actionable. As a result, care team members often suffer from alarm fatigue and become immune sounds and alerts from these

systems, which can have serious consequences. In addition, hospitalized patients are also fatigued by the incessant sound of

alarms, which often disrupt their sleep and makes them and their family members feel anxious. The impact this noise has on

patient, family and staff well-being has accelerated the need to understand alarms, how often they occur, how they are responded

to, and how to manage them safely and efficiently. Being able to connect the right people with the right information quickly is

critical to delivering safe patient care in a quiet, healing environment.

Methodology/Approach

: William Osler Health System implemented an intelligent alarm management solution to improve

patient care, safety and experience across three sites. With the solution, alerts and alarms are automatically sent to the right

care team member(s) based on workflow and escalation rules defined in the system. Clinicians can easily distinguish between

alarms from multiple sources and different criticalities based on the audio and visual information sent directly to their device of

choice – whether it’s a smartphone, laptop or workstation. The solution enables them to quickly prioritize alarms and respond

appropriately. All alarm events and responses are date and time stamped and logged in real time, providing robust data and

an audit trail to identify potential gaps in communication and processes. Analytics from the solution helps hospital leaders

understand alarm trends per bed, unit, staff, alarm type, alarm density, distribution and response times. This data allows

refinement of alarm filtering and escalation to reduce alarm fatigue, improve patient safety and enhance care team efficiency.

Findings/Results

: Integration of the alarm management solution with clinical systems such as the EHR, nurse call system, and

physiological monitors has streamlined workflows and minimized the complexity of managing multiple systems and vendors.

One of the most impactful alerts set up connects the communication system to a point-of-care decision-support application.

The software monitors patient data gathered from the EHR system, looking for early signs of a developing infection. When

the system detects early warning signs of sepsis, it automatically sends an alarm to the appropriate nurse on his or her device

of choice. With early warning, hospital staff can act immediately to accelerate treatment and improve patient outcomes. These

workflow integrations and intelligent codes have helped decrease code blue events and ICU transfers. Clinicians have also noted

a decrease in mortality rates.

Conclusion/Recommendations

: In integrated approach to communication and alarm management is key to reducing alarm or

interruption fatigue, increase staff response times, and improve the healthcare experience. Mobile healthcare technology that is

fully integrated to workflows and with clinically relevant patient data can also lead to better patient outcomes.

Biography

Masood also held the roles of Deputy Chief of Staff and Chief Medical Information Officer at William Osler Health System (Osler) from 2005 to 2015. In 2015, he

was appointed as the Regional Chief Medical Information Officer for Osler, Headwaters Healthcare Centre and the Central West Community Care Access Centre

in Brampton and Orangeville, Ontario.

hikaramba@gmail.com

AsimMasood

William Osler Health System, Canada

Asim Masood, J Comm Pub Health Nurs 2018, Volume 4

DOI: 10.4172/2471-9846-C1-001