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Acute clinical deterioration and consumer escalation: The understanding and perceptions of hospital staff

INTRODUCTION: Consumer escalation systems allow patients and families to escalate concerns about acute clinical deterioration. Hospital staff can impact upon the success of this process. As part of evaluation processes within a Local Health Network, where a consumer escalation system was introduced...

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Autores principales: Thiele, Lisa, Flabouris, Arthas, Thompson, Campbell
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9202900/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35709173
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0269921
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author Thiele, Lisa
Flabouris, Arthas
Thompson, Campbell
author_facet Thiele, Lisa
Flabouris, Arthas
Thompson, Campbell
author_sort Thiele, Lisa
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Consumer escalation systems allow patients and families to escalate concerns about acute clinical deterioration. Hospital staff can impact upon the success of this process. As part of evaluation processes within a Local Health Network, where a consumer escalation system was introduced in accordance with National requirements, we sought to explore clinicians’ understanding and perceptions of consumer escalation. METHODS: Voluntary and anonymous staff surveys pre, and post, system introduction. Quantitative data was analysed using descriptive statistics, chi-square independence, and non-parametric independent samples median tests. Qualitative data was evaluated using content analysis and cross-referenced with quantitative responses. RESULTS: Respondent’s (pre: 215; post: 89) area of work varied significantly between survey periods. Most agreed that patients/families have a sound knowledge of a patient’s typical health status (pre: 192/215 (89.3%); post 82/88 (93.2%)) and that patients/families should be encouraged to escalate concerns of deterioration to ward staff (pre: 209/212 (98.6%); post: 85/89 (95.5%)). Respondent perceptions of patient/family ability to recognise clinical deterioration varied. Staff agreement towards local response expectations decreased as the degree of clinical requirement increased. Staff concerns of increased workloads (pre: 90/214 (42.1%); post 12/72 (16.7%), p<0.001) and conflict generation (pre: 71/213 (33.3%); post: 7/71 (9.9%), p = 0.001) decreased significantly following system introduction. However, clinician perceptions of positive system effects also decreased (patient-staff rapport pre: 163/213 (76.5%); post: 38/72 (52.8%), p = 0.001; patient centred care pre: 188/214 (87.9%); post: 53/72 (73.6%), p = 0.012; patient safety pre: 173/214 (80.8%); post: 49/72 (68.1%), p = 0.077). Only 53% of respondents (pre: 112/213 (52.6%); post: 48/88 (54.5%)) perceived that patient/family have sufficient confidence to escalate concerns. CONCLUSION: Consumer escalation systems require staff support. Staff perceptions may indicate, and act as, barriers to the operation of consumer escalation processes. Further exploration in identifying and managing staff barriers is crucial to the success of consumer escalation.
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spelling pubmed-92029002022-06-17 Acute clinical deterioration and consumer escalation: The understanding and perceptions of hospital staff Thiele, Lisa Flabouris, Arthas Thompson, Campbell PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Consumer escalation systems allow patients and families to escalate concerns about acute clinical deterioration. Hospital staff can impact upon the success of this process. As part of evaluation processes within a Local Health Network, where a consumer escalation system was introduced in accordance with National requirements, we sought to explore clinicians’ understanding and perceptions of consumer escalation. METHODS: Voluntary and anonymous staff surveys pre, and post, system introduction. Quantitative data was analysed using descriptive statistics, chi-square independence, and non-parametric independent samples median tests. Qualitative data was evaluated using content analysis and cross-referenced with quantitative responses. RESULTS: Respondent’s (pre: 215; post: 89) area of work varied significantly between survey periods. Most agreed that patients/families have a sound knowledge of a patient’s typical health status (pre: 192/215 (89.3%); post 82/88 (93.2%)) and that patients/families should be encouraged to escalate concerns of deterioration to ward staff (pre: 209/212 (98.6%); post: 85/89 (95.5%)). Respondent perceptions of patient/family ability to recognise clinical deterioration varied. Staff agreement towards local response expectations decreased as the degree of clinical requirement increased. Staff concerns of increased workloads (pre: 90/214 (42.1%); post 12/72 (16.7%), p<0.001) and conflict generation (pre: 71/213 (33.3%); post: 7/71 (9.9%), p = 0.001) decreased significantly following system introduction. However, clinician perceptions of positive system effects also decreased (patient-staff rapport pre: 163/213 (76.5%); post: 38/72 (52.8%), p = 0.001; patient centred care pre: 188/214 (87.9%); post: 53/72 (73.6%), p = 0.012; patient safety pre: 173/214 (80.8%); post: 49/72 (68.1%), p = 0.077). Only 53% of respondents (pre: 112/213 (52.6%); post: 48/88 (54.5%)) perceived that patient/family have sufficient confidence to escalate concerns. CONCLUSION: Consumer escalation systems require staff support. Staff perceptions may indicate, and act as, barriers to the operation of consumer escalation processes. Further exploration in identifying and managing staff barriers is crucial to the success of consumer escalation. Public Library of Science 2022-06-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9202900/ /pubmed/35709173 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0269921 Text en © 2022 Thiele et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Thiele, Lisa
Flabouris, Arthas
Thompson, Campbell
Acute clinical deterioration and consumer escalation: The understanding and perceptions of hospital staff
title Acute clinical deterioration and consumer escalation: The understanding and perceptions of hospital staff
title_full Acute clinical deterioration and consumer escalation: The understanding and perceptions of hospital staff
title_fullStr Acute clinical deterioration and consumer escalation: The understanding and perceptions of hospital staff
title_full_unstemmed Acute clinical deterioration and consumer escalation: The understanding and perceptions of hospital staff
title_short Acute clinical deterioration and consumer escalation: The understanding and perceptions of hospital staff
title_sort acute clinical deterioration and consumer escalation: the understanding and perceptions of hospital staff
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9202900/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35709173
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0269921
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