Zibrowski Elaine, Shepherd Lisa, Booth Richard, Sedig Kamran, Gibson Candace
Health Information Science, Faculty of Information & Media Studies, University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada.
Department of Medicine, Division of Emergency Medicine, University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada.
JMIR Hum Factors. 2019 Feb 6;6(1):e11714. doi: 10.2196/11714.
Many emergency departments (EDs) have used the Lean methodology to guide the restructuring of their practice environments and patient care processes. Despite research cautioning that the layout and design of treatment areas can increase patients' vulnerability to privacy breaches, evaluations of Lean interventions have ignored the potential impact of these on patients' informational and physical privacy. If professional regulatory organizations are going to require that nurses and physicians interact with their patients privately and confidentially, we need to examine the degrees to which their practice environment supports them to do so.
This study explored how a Lean intervention impacted the ability of emergency medicine physicians and nurses to optimize conditions of privacy and confidentiality for patients under their care.
From July to December 2017, semistructured interviews were iteratively conducted with health care professionals practicing emergency medicine at a single teaching hospital in Ontario, Canada. The hospital has 1000 beds, and approximately 128,000 patients visit its 2 EDs annually. In response to poor wait times, in 2013, the hospital's 2 EDs underwent a Lean redesign. As the interviews proceeded, information from their transcripts was first coded into topics and then organized into themes. Data collection continued to theoretical sufficiency.
Overall, 15 nurses and 5 physicians were interviewed. A major component of the Lean intervention was the construction of a three-zone front cell at both sites. Each zone was outfitted with a set of chairs in an open concept configuration. Although, in theory, professionals perceived value in having the chairs, in practice, these served multiple, and often, competing uses by patients, family members, and visitors. In an attempt to work around limitations they encountered and keep patients flowing, professionals often needed to move a patient out from a front chair and actively search for another location that better protected individuals' informational and physical privacy.
To our knowledge, this is the first qualitative study of the impact of a Lean intervention on patient privacy and confidentiality. The physical configuration of the front cell often intensified the clinical work of professionals because they needed to actively search for spaces better affording privacy and confidentiality for patient encounters. These searches likely increased clinical time and added to these patients' length of stay. We advocate that the physical structure and configuration of the front cell should be re-examined under the lens of Lean's principle of value-added activities. Future exploration of the perspectives of patients, family members, and visitors regarding the relative importance of privacy and confidentiality during emergency care is warranted.
许多急诊科已采用精益方法来指导其实践环境和患者护理流程的重组。尽管有研究警告说治疗区域的布局和设计可能会增加患者隐私被侵犯的风险,但对精益干预措施的评估却忽略了这些措施对患者信息和身体隐私的潜在影响。如果专业监管机构要求护士和医生与患者私下且保密地进行互动,我们就需要研究他们的实践环境在多大程度上支持他们这样做。
本研究探讨了精益干预如何影响急诊医学医生和护士为其所护理患者优化隐私和保密条件的能力。
2017年7月至12月,对加拿大安大略省一家教学医院从事急诊医学的医护人员进行了迭代式半结构化访谈。该医院有1000张床位,每年约有12.8万名患者前往其两个急诊科就诊。由于等待时间过长,2013年,该医院的两个急诊科进行了精益重新设计。随着访谈的进行,他们的访谈记录信息首先被编码为主题,然后组织成主题。数据收集持续到理论饱和。
总共采访了15名护士和5名医生。精益干预的一个主要组成部分是在两个地点都建造了一个三区前室。每个区域都配备了一组开放式配置的椅子。虽然从理论上讲,专业人员认为这些椅子有价值,但在实践中,患者、家属和访客对这些椅子有多种且往往相互冲突的用途。为了克服遇到的限制并保持患者流动,专业人员经常需要将患者从前排椅子上移开,并积极寻找另一个能更好保护个人信息和身体隐私的地方。
据我们所知,这是第一项关于精益干预对患者隐私和保密影响的定性研究。前室的物理配置常常加剧了专业人员的临床工作,因为他们需要积极寻找能为患者诊疗提供更好隐私和保密的空间。这些寻找可能增加了临床时间,并延长了这些患者的住院时间。我们主张应从精益的增值活动原则的角度重新审视前室的物理结构和配置。未来有必要探索患者、家属和访客对急诊护理期间隐私和保密相对重要性的看法。