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Demonstrating a Difference: Developing an Organizational Framework for Evaluation of the Impact of Patient and Family Centred Care. Jocelyn Bennett RN MScN, CON(C) – Senior Director, Acute and Chronic Medicine and Nursing
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Demonstrating a Difference: Developing an Organizational Framework for Evaluation of the Impact of Patient and Family Centred Care Jocelyn Bennett RN MScN, CON(C) – Senior Director, Acute and Chronic Medicine and Nursing Tracy Kitch RN, MScN – Senior Director, Women's and Infants Health and Nursing Maureen Riley – Parent Advisor
Outline • Context of PFCC at Mount Sinai Hospital • Evaluation Framework • Examples • Successes and Lessons Learned
Health Care in Ontario • Regionalized system – increased integration of care across the continuum • Single payer through the Ministry of Health and Long Term Care ($37.9 B in 07/08)
External and Internal Driving Forces • Culture of accountability – fiscal, quality and safety • Alignment with organizational strategy • “stickiness factor”
The Challenge at MSH • How will we know that this will make a difference? • Intuitively – it makes sense but intellectually – how will I know that this is advancing our performance as an organization • You can’t manage what you don’t measure – striking a balance
PFCC at MSH • Key deliverable – the evaluation framework • Integration of existing tools • Balanced Scorecard • NRC Picker Patient Satisfaction Survey • Canadian Council on Health Services Accreditation – Required Organizational Practices for Patient Safety
Complexities of Measurement Challenges to evidence improvement Versus Systems that don’t lend themselves easily to measurement
Where to Focus? • Organizationally – how to affect change? • Organizational subsets or microsystems • where patients, families and staff interact • Allows for rapid cycle improvement of issues and continued growth over time
Framework for Indicators Process Outcomes Structure Corporate Micro Systems (i.e. team, unit, dept) SpecificInitiatives
Strategy for PFCC Evaluation • Goal to be Achieved • At the level of the organization • Principle to Operationalize • Strategy • Team based level • Measurement Metrics • Structure, process and outcome objectives • Link to Balanced Scorecard
Goal to be achieved Mutually beneficial Partnerships Principle to operationalize Participation in care Strategy to enact Patients/Families on Rounds Daily goal setting Metrics (structure, process &/or outcome) Patient Satisfaction Chart audits Implementation of tool/process Balanced Scorecard Strategy for PFCC Implementation and Evaluation Goal focus on the organization Strategy focus at the microsystem
Parent Evaluations: Examples from the NICU • Parent Buddy Program • Parents on Rounds • Accreditation • Patient Satisfaction Survey • Annual Dialogue with NICU Leadership
Parent Buddy Program • Parent Initiated in 1990 • Shared common experience provides support • Critical role of parents in shaping the evaluation strategy Effectiveness of a Parent Buddy Program for Mothers of very preterm infants in a neonatal intensive care UnitA non equivalent control group design (CMAJ April 2003)
Parents On Rounds • IFCC conference Boston (2003) • Parent persistence kept this issue on the team agenda, despite the challenges in implementation • Pre and Post surveys of staff and parents • Importance of using post survey data to monitor team performance
Accreditation • 2 Parent Advisors attend monthly multi-disciplinary team meetings • Have participated in 2003, 2006 accreditation • “This dynamic team absolutely works as a team. Parent Representatives are actively engaged.” (CCHSA, 2006)
NRC Picker Survey • Questions customized for NICU population • Results reported to Neonatal and Management teams quarterly
Annual Dialogue with NICU Administration • Chief of Paediatrics and NICU NUA attend • Parents share accomplishments and future projects • Staff share developments in NICU • Opportunity to for parents to become partners in planning and evaluation • establish goals for the next year • proposal for parent position discussed this year
Lessons Learned • If you chase two rabbits both will escape • Focus our energies • Choosing an enterprise wide goal with a focus on strategy at the microsystem • Differentiate indicators being monitored versus actioned • Many feel overwhelmed by the challenge of measurement • Start simple and grow
Lessons Learned • Build into current reporting processes and accountability structures • Reporting on the balanced scorecard • Consider inclusion of indicators “under development” • The importance of evidence • “What’s in it for me?” (WIIFM) • Ability to engage all team members • Penetration into business models
Leadership • Strategy and action intersect • Continue to take opportunities to spotlight PFCC • The work is never done...
Contact Information Jocelyn Bennett jbennett@mtsinai.on.ca Tracy Kitch tkitch@mtsinai.on.ca Maureen Riley rileym@smh.toronto.on.ca