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Improving room layouts for venepuncture, cannulation and ABG equipment on surgical wards

The Productive Ward series has effectively helped to standardise the storage of equipment in hospital ward treatment rooms; however, in our organisation equipment for venepunture and cannulation had been excluded. This resulted in clinicians having to navigate several unfamiliar environments while o...

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Autores principales: Pedley, Ryan, Whitehouse, Anna, Hammond, Sarah
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: British Publishing Group 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4663844/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26734247
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjquality.u554.w477
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author Pedley, Ryan
Whitehouse, Anna
Hammond, Sarah
author_facet Pedley, Ryan
Whitehouse, Anna
Hammond, Sarah
author_sort Pedley, Ryan
collection PubMed
description The Productive Ward series has effectively helped to standardise the storage of equipment in hospital ward treatment rooms; however, in our organisation equipment for venepunture and cannulation had been excluded. This resulted in clinicians having to navigate several unfamiliar environments while on-call and hence waste valuable time searching for basic equipment. We aimed to make it easier to locate and identify the basic equipment used for cannulation, venepuncture, and arterial blood gas sampling and more efficient to collect. We examined the initial layout of equipment on four surgical wards in a large teaching hospital. The time taken for junior doctors, nurses, health care assistants, and physician assistants to gather equipment on these wards was recorded along with a process map of steps involved. Our intervention was to relocate the equipment into adjacent storage and make it easily identifiable by the use of a ‘red dot’. Following these changes we repeated the measurements. There was an overall reduction in the mean time taken to gather the equipment required to insert a venous cannula on an unfamiliar ward from 2 min 41 s pre-intervention (range 52 s to 6 mins 58 s, n = 23) to 26 s post-intervention (range 8 s to 1 min 20 s, n = 51). Additionally, the number of steps involved in the process was reduced from 16 to five. All of the 32 junior doctors surveyed felt that faster identification improved patient safety. A significant reduction in the time wasted by clinicians searching for venepuncture equipment on surgical wards has been achieved by simplifying the storage, layout, and identification of this kit. The accumulated benefit includes increased productivity, familiarity, and safety, which is paramount when attending unwell patients on unfamiliar wards.
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spelling pubmed-46638442016-01-05 Improving room layouts for venepuncture, cannulation and ABG equipment on surgical wards Pedley, Ryan Whitehouse, Anna Hammond, Sarah BMJ Qual Improv Rep BMJ Quality Improvement Programme The Productive Ward series has effectively helped to standardise the storage of equipment in hospital ward treatment rooms; however, in our organisation equipment for venepunture and cannulation had been excluded. This resulted in clinicians having to navigate several unfamiliar environments while on-call and hence waste valuable time searching for basic equipment. We aimed to make it easier to locate and identify the basic equipment used for cannulation, venepuncture, and arterial blood gas sampling and more efficient to collect. We examined the initial layout of equipment on four surgical wards in a large teaching hospital. The time taken for junior doctors, nurses, health care assistants, and physician assistants to gather equipment on these wards was recorded along with a process map of steps involved. Our intervention was to relocate the equipment into adjacent storage and make it easily identifiable by the use of a ‘red dot’. Following these changes we repeated the measurements. There was an overall reduction in the mean time taken to gather the equipment required to insert a venous cannula on an unfamiliar ward from 2 min 41 s pre-intervention (range 52 s to 6 mins 58 s, n = 23) to 26 s post-intervention (range 8 s to 1 min 20 s, n = 51). Additionally, the number of steps involved in the process was reduced from 16 to five. All of the 32 junior doctors surveyed felt that faster identification improved patient safety. A significant reduction in the time wasted by clinicians searching for venepuncture equipment on surgical wards has been achieved by simplifying the storage, layout, and identification of this kit. The accumulated benefit includes increased productivity, familiarity, and safety, which is paramount when attending unwell patients on unfamiliar wards. British Publishing Group 2014-02-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4663844/ /pubmed/26734247 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjquality.u554.w477 Text en © 2014, Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial License, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non commercial and is otherwise in compliance with the license. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/ http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/legalcode
spellingShingle BMJ Quality Improvement Programme
Pedley, Ryan
Whitehouse, Anna
Hammond, Sarah
Improving room layouts for venepuncture, cannulation and ABG equipment on surgical wards
title Improving room layouts for venepuncture, cannulation and ABG equipment on surgical wards
title_full Improving room layouts for venepuncture, cannulation and ABG equipment on surgical wards
title_fullStr Improving room layouts for venepuncture, cannulation and ABG equipment on surgical wards
title_full_unstemmed Improving room layouts for venepuncture, cannulation and ABG equipment on surgical wards
title_short Improving room layouts for venepuncture, cannulation and ABG equipment on surgical wards
title_sort improving room layouts for venepuncture, cannulation and abg equipment on surgical wards
topic BMJ Quality Improvement Programme
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4663844/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26734247
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjquality.u554.w477
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