Co-developing, piloting, and evaluating a translational simulation (TS) delivery model for the promotion of psychological trauma-informed care (TIC) to improve service delivery within acute hospital settings: A Research Protocol

Autor: Frédérique Vallières, Marie E Ward, Darragh Shields, Una Geary, Caroline Gardner, Dermot King, Gerry McCarthy, John Conolly, Joseph Brown, Nana Wiedemann, Paul Staunton, Rory Halpin, Tara McGinty, Victoria Brazil, Aliza Ali, Alan Buckley, Joanne Dowds, Sharon Lambert, Sinead McGarry, Paul McLoughlin, Muireann Murphy, Rebecca Murphy, Austin O'Carroll, Meg Ryan, Sharon Slattery, Eileen Sweeney, Mel Swords, Ganzamungu Zihindula, Clíona NíCheallaigh
Rok vydání: 2023
Předmět:
Zdroj: HRB Open Research. 6:27
ISSN: 2515-4826
Popis: Background: Over 70% of the general population have experienced at least one psychologically traumatic event in their lifetime, with 30.5% experiencing four or more events. Recognising the prevalence and potentially injurious effects of psychological trauma among healthcare workers and patients alike is considered important to ensure patient engagement, quality of care, positive health outcomes, as well as improved staff wellness, and more resilient health systems. Aim: The current project aims to improve the experience of both patients and staff in two acute hospital settings in St James’ Hospital (SJH): the Emergency Department (ED) and Acute Medical Assessment Unit (AMAU). This will be achieved through the development of a translational simulation improvement programme for trauma-informed care (TS4TIC). The objective of trauma-informed care (TIC) in the acute hospital setting is to reduce the impact of previous trauma on the care experience. Methods: Underpinned the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) Model for Improvement we will (i) co-design a TIC improvement programme for use in acute hospital settings using translational simulation (TS) approaches, (ii) implement TS4TIC in two acute hospital settings, and (iii) co-evaluate the effectiveness and acceptability of TS4TIC using co-defined outcome, process, and balancing indicators measured across iterative Plan, Do, Study, Act (PDSA) cycles. Expected Outcome: The project’s completion will result in a co-designed, open access TS4TIC Toolkit, consisting of a suite of TS scenarios and accompanying monitoring and training resources to guide the adaptation of this approach for use in other acute healthcare settings nationally and internationally.
Databáze: OpenAIRE