Operational Failures Detected by Frontline Acute Care Nurses

Autor: Kathleen R, Stevens, Eileen P, Engh, Heather, Tubbs-Cooley, Deborah Marks, Conley, Tammy, Cupit, Ellen, D'Errico, Pam, DiNapoli, Joleen Lynn, Fischer, Ruth, Freed, Anne Marie, Kotzer, Carolyn L, Lindgren, Marie Ann, Marino, Lisa, Mestas, Jessica, Perdue, Rebekah, Powers, Patricia, Radovich, Karen, Rice, Linda P, Riley, Peri, Rosenfeld, Linda, Roussel, Nancy A, Ryan-Wenger, Linda, Searle-Leach, Nicole M, Shonka, Vicki L, Smith, Laura, Sweatt, Mary, Townsend-Gervis, Ellen, Wathen, Janice S, Withycombe
Rok vydání: 2017
Předmět:
Zdroj: Research in nursinghealth. 40(3)
ISSN: 1098-240X
Popis: Frontline nurses encounter operational failures (OFs), or breakdowns in system processes, that hinder care, erode quality, and threaten patient safety. Previous research has relied on external observers to identify operational failures; nurses have been passive participants in the identification of system failures that impede their ability to deliver safe and effective care. To better understand frontline nurses' direct experiences with operational failures in hospitals, we conducted a multi-site study within a national research network to describe the rate and categories of operational failures detected by nurses as they provided direct patient care. Data were collected by 774 nurses working in 67 adult and pediatric medical-surgical units in 23 hospitals. Nurses systematically recorded data about operational failures encountered during 10 work shifts over a 20-day period. In total, nurses reported 27,298 operational failures over 4,497 shifts, a rate of 6.07 operational failures per shift. The highest rate of failures occurred in the category of Equipment/Supplies, and the lowest rate occurred in the category of Physical Unit/ Layout. No differences in OF rate were detected based on hospital size, teaching status, or unit type. Given the scale of this study, we conclude that operational failures are frequent and varied across system processes, and that organizations may readily obtain crucial information about operational failures from frontline nurses. Nurses' detection of operational failures could provide organizations with rich, real-time information about system operations to improve organizational reliability.
Databáze: OpenAIRE