AHRQ Safety Program for Long-term Care: HAIs/CAUTI Engaging Residents and Families in CAUTI Prevention Content Webinar for Facility Team Leads and Core Team Members May 21, 2015 Sue Collier, RN, MSN, FABC Clinical Content Development Lead Health Research & Education Trust American Hospital Association
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AHRQ Safety Program for Long-term Care: HAIs/CAUTI Engaging Residents and Families in CAUTI Prevention Content Webinar for Facility Team Leads and Core.
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AHRQ Safety Program for Long-term Care: HAIs/CAUTI
Engaging Residents and Familiesin
CAUTI Prevention
Content Webinar for Facility Team Leads and Core
Team Members
May 21, 2015
Sue Collier, RN, MSN, FABC
Clinical Content Development Lead
Health Research & Education Trust
American Hospital Association
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Learning Objectives
Upon completion of this session, participants will be able to:
• define resident-centered care;
• review the benefits of engaging residents and families as partners in care;
• describe examples of how to engage residents and families in reducing CAUTIs; and
• identify tools and resources you can use to educate staff, residents and families.
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What is Resident- and Family-Centered Care?
• A philosophy that keeps the person, the resident and their family at the center of
every decision-making process
• A way to assure residents’ preferences are valued and respected
• Care that reflects the core concepts of person-centered care
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What is Resident Engagement?
• An important component of resident-centered care
• An environment and culture that promotes residents, families, clinicians and all facility staff working together to improve quality and safety
• Recognition that residents and family are part of the team
• Actions that reflect the core concepts of resident-centered care
Consequences of Nursing Home Infections
• Leading cause of death and complications
• 150,000-300,000 admissions to hospitals from nursing homes each year
• Costliest of all adverse event-related hospitalization
• Prevention of these infections is critical in order to promote resident safety
Every number is a resident!
Montoya, Mody. Aging health. 2011 December ; 7(6): 889–899. doi:10.2217/AHE.11.80.Stone et al ICHE 2012.Smith PW et al ICHE 2008.
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Benefits to Engaging Residents and Families
• Residents and families have the ultimate concern for infections
• Residents and families can help the staff by
• Asking questions
• Identifying problems and solutions
• Staff can be more efficient and feel more valued in a resident-centered environment
• Facilities have better outcomes when there is shared decision-making
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CHAT: BENEFITS
What are some benefits of engaging residents and families in infection prevention?
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Achieving a Culture of Safety with C.A.U.T.I and T.E.A.M.S.
LTC Safety Toolkit: Module 5Resident and Family Engagement
• Methods and tools for working with residents and families as partners
in their care to increase safety, improve satisfaction, and optimize
resident outcomes
• Ways to use the toolkit include:
Share videos with teams to spark engagement in staff safety
assessments
Provide templates and discussion guides to project leads
Educate teams on T.E.A.M.S. and Just Culture
Use videos and training modules to orient new staff
Train teams in using teamwork and communication tools
Engage senior leaders and project champions
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CHAT: CHALLENGES
What challenges have you had when engaging residents
and family in CAUTI prevention?
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Educating All Staff in Resident And Family Engagement in a Culture of Safety
• Use slide set with facilitator’s notes• Share recorded session for all staff• Use Discussion Guide with key questions to
spark conversations• Provide copies of T.E.A.M.S. and C.A.U.T.I
Infographics• Provide Evaluation Form and Certificate of
Completion
Your Role in Supporting Resident & Family Engagement in CAUTI Prevention (T.E.A.M.S.)
• Invite residents/families to serve on the safety teams; include resident stories in all safety improvement team meetings
• Encourage residents to speak up and communicate concerns
• Share information concerning the CAUTI prevention efforts
• Ask residents to their share stories
• Include safety information in Resident Council meetings
• Invite residents to participate in new staff orientation and education
• Include CAUTI prevention information in admission packets
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Your Role in Supporting Resident & Family Engagement in CAUTI Prevention (C.A.U.T.I.)
• Monitor and report small changes in a resident's condition
• Ensure proper catheter insertion and maintenance
• Train residents/family in catheter care hygiene
• Explain the signs and symptoms of UTI
• Discuss alternatives to an indwelling urinary catheter
• Include family in catheter assessments
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CHAT: ACTION STEPS
What will you do to engage residents and families in the
CAUTI prevention program?
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QUESTIONS?
Questions
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References
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. 2012. TeamSTEPPS® Long-term Care Version. Retrieved from http://www.ahrq.gov/professionals/education/curriculum-tools/teamstepps/longtermcare/index.htm.
Advancing Excellence in America’s Nursing Homes: Person-Centered Care. Retrieved from http://www.nhqualitycampaign.org/star_index.aspx?controls=personcenteredcareexploregoal.
AHRQ CUSP Toolkit, Patient Family Engagement. Retrieved from http://www.ahrq.gov/professionals/education/curriculum-tools/cusptoolkit/modules/patfamilyengagement/index.html.
Frampton, et al. Long-term Care Improvement Guide. Retrieved from http://planetree.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/LTC-Improvement-Guide-For-Download.pdf.
Association for Professional in infection Control and Epidemiology. Patient safety resources for consumers. Retrieved from http://www.apic.org/For-Consumers/Patient-safety-resources.
Institute for Patient and Family Centered Care. Retrieved from http://www.ipfcc.org/advance/topics.html.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. FAQs about Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infection. Retrieved from http://www.cdc.gov/HAI/ca_uti/uti.html.