Case Report Volume 2 Issue 5
1Trauma Critical Care RN, The MetroHealth System, USA
2Adjunct Professor, Notre Dame College, Cuyahoga Community College, USA
Correspondence: Reezena Malaska, Adjunct Professor, Notre Dame College, Cuyahoga Community College, The MetroHealth System, Cleveland/Akron, Ohio Area, USA
Received: June 26, 2015 | Published: August 14, 2015
Citation: Malaska RH (2015) Patient Satisfaction: The Journey of an Observation Patient from Waiting Room to Home again. J Anesth Crit Care Open Access 2(5): 00073. DOI: 10.15406/jaccoa.2015.02.00073
The information, opinions expressed in this presentation is solely those of the author/presenter and not those of The Metro Health System or any affiliated company or organization. The Metro Health System does not guarantee the accuracy or reliability of the information provided here in. The call to provide meaningful high quality care driven by the needs of patients and their families are forcing stake holders to rethink care delivery. Federal guidelines, Congress and non-federal stakeholders (Institute of Medicine, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid, National Quality Strategy three aims, Joint Commission) are forcing hospitals and health systems to make strategic changes to ensure compliancy, efficiency, and quality improvement for cost effective care. Nurses spend the most time caring for patients and have the most influence than any other healthcare givers in relation to patient outcomes. The patient is the focus for everything we do. This presentation explores strategies to improve patient satisfaction by understanding the patient perspective throughout the care continuum and improvements that could be made for staff and the patient to make it a more efficient process. How staff should engage with the patient during admission, treatment and discharge.
Keywords: caring, caring behaviors, collaborative management, communication, cost-effective care, culture of safety, holistic caring, human caring, interdisciplinary care, nurse-patient relationship, nurse’s touch, patient engagement, patient safety, patient perspective, quality of care, patient satisfaction, quality of care, safe staffing, person, environment, health, nursing
A 61 year old male patient came into the ER with an acute episode of CHF, SOB for 2weeks wanting to ride it out because of his social situation.
Interdisciplinary care
Patient perspective throughout the care continuum
This patient “just wanted to get better & go home”, but he had no “home” to go to; find a way to get some financial help & get his life back on track…
Why is patient satisfaction so important?
Let’s recap
The common goal: safe care, high quality care, cost effective care = improved outcomes.3
Improving the patient care experience, population’s health and reducing costs…
Nurse-patient relationship & it’s effects on quality of care
The nurse-patient relationship begins from the moment of that first meeting, the patient requiring care to heal, attain better health, and the nurse as provider of therapeutic care advocates for the patient for good outcomes.
The patient is central to (focus of) everything we do in healthcare - this means involving the patient and designated family in the decision-making process by being considerate, communicating and collaborating, respecting their wishes.1
Nurse-patient relationship… (theoretical basis-nursing is an “art and science”)
We’ve gone from “a nurse’s touch” to “high tech” mode, utilizing modern technology - essentially from a patient centered approach to spending increasing amounts of time manipulating technological applications; somewhere along the way we have lost the humanistic aspect perceived in patient satisfaction scores as lack of caring in attitudes/behaviors.
Let’s put the caring back into clinical practice (i believe “caring” in nursing is related to our behaviors in the clinical environment)
How should staff engage with the patient? (it takes a nurse’s “touch”)
How should staff engage with the patient?... (when patients are sick they are at their most vulnerable)
Remember its all about the patient not about you, me or our egos!
There is a nursing theory behind all this! (Jean Watson’s theory on human caring/transpersonal caring (2006, 2008))
When I think of caring, I think of Jean Watson’s.5,8 Theory on Human Caring, can be used as a guide and applied to many different aspects of nursing.
Her belief: holistic health care is central to the practice of nursing, the person is cared for holistically (the human aspect of caring) for which she explicates caring is related to our behaviors; caring comes from “within”.
Watson’s theory on caring is an adaptable framework that can be used widely from bedside nursing, relationships with patients, co- workers, interdisciplinary team to nursing management and leadership and our personal lives.
Overcoming barriers to make this a more efficient process (improvements that could be made for staff and patients…)
Overcoming barriers to make this a more efficient process (improvements that could be made for staff and patients)
Reflection from a nurse’s perspective (bear in mind the challenges nurse’s face on a daily basis: don’t forget about us!!)
According to Watson & Foster8 the health care system of the 21st century has brought the nursing profession’s struggle to the forefront; nurses are torn between the human caring model of nursing that attracted them to the profession in the first place and the task oriented biomedical model, institutional demands that consumes their practice time. Nurses are caught in the middle of this fast paced “tug-o-war” of health care delivery that leaves little time to form an authentic rapport with the patient, an essential component of caring practices for the best outcomes of health and well-being.
The perception of lack of caring is a common complaint in today’s health care system reflected in the poor reviews received from patients’ evaluations of their care, a driver for reimbursement. What is going on in the working environment also contributes significantly to this negative perception and patient outcomes. Duffield & Diers et al.9 suggest more complex environment also impacts patient outcomes - more medical consequences. Duffield & Diers et al9 reports in their literature review that nurse staffing (numbers and skill mix), workload, and work environment had a direct relationship with patient outcomes; as well, higher RN staffing was associated with lower incidence of mortality, failure to rescue, cardiac arrest, and lowered risk of nosocomial infections (pneumonia, urinary tract infection, sepsis, shock, and falls) in which length of stay was also decreased.10–17
Person, environment, health, nursing
The domain of nursing has always been the nurse, the patient the situation and environment in which they find themselves. This situation, the health of the patient is the very purpose for the nurse/patient relationship. Nursing has always prided itself on being a caring profession, human caring the nurse’s personal touch cannot be replaced by technology. Watson’s work reflects both the empirical (science) and aesthetic (art) “ways of knowing”. Her model can be used as a guide for integrating theory, evidence and professional practice and easily adapted because of its humanism aspect - healing arts, therapeutic relationships and caring values. The call is to provide meaningful high quality care driven by the needs of patients and their families forcing stakeholders to rethink care delivery. Patient outcome is measured by length of stay and mortality indicators.
To make this work
We have to look at what we must do today to change the current environment. We must identify challenges, work with the opportunities, be creative, adapt, “stay the course” until we find the acceptable solutions to achieve that excellence in “patient centered care” (safe high quality cost effective care, & good outcomes).
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The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest.
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©2015 Malaska. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and build upon your work non-commercially.