Session Type
Meeting
Search Results for rounding
Abstract Number: 312
Hospital Medicine 2017, May 1-4, 2017; Las Vegas, Nev.
Background: Interprofessional teamwork in healthcare organizations is crucial to the delivery of quality patient care. Efforts to improve teamwork on hospital medicine units commonly fail due to clinicians and other care team members (case managers and pharmacists) are responsible for patients scattered across numerous floors and units. UK HealthCare developed and implemented the Interprofessional Teamwork […]
Abstract Number: 318
SHM Converge 2024
Background: Effective doctor-patient communication is crucial for the exchange of important information. Improved communication can positively influence patient satisfaction, adherence and ultimately can lead to improvement in health outcomes.Patient satisfaction scores in the inpatient setting are elicited using the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) survey. Effective communication between a physician and […]
Abstract Number: 377
Hospital Medicine 2019, March 24-27, National Harbor, Md.
Background: Geographic hospitalist staffing and interdisciplinary rounding has been shown to improve staff communication, patient communication, and reduce length of stay. Communication between hospitalist and nurses also play a crucial role in patient safety and hospital throughput. Despite its importance, maintaining geography is difficult and communication between physicians and nurses are often sub-optimal and fragmented. […]
Abstract Number: 377
SHM Converge 2023
Background: Structured peer observation programs – in which clinicians observe one another and provide feedback – are potential mediators for spreading “best practices” and encouraging feedback among a group. Studies show hospitalist peer observation programs are feasible, perceived favorably by participants, and lead to improvements in self-reported assessments of teaching abilities. However, existing peer-observation models […]
Abstract Number: 383
SHM Converge 2024
Background: Interdisciplinary rounding at the bedside is associated with improvements in patient flow metrics, interdisciplinary communication, and patient perception of teamwork among care team members. At UC San Diego Health, FIT (Focused Interdisciplinary Team) Rounding has been the standard of care on seven diverse patient care units since 2017. However, with the arrival of the […]
Abstract Number: 415
SHM Converge 2024
Background: Interdisciplinary rounding at the bedside is a recognized practice for improving patient care, communication, and teamwork. The Focused Interdisciplinary Team (FIT) Rounding model at UCSD has been in place since 2017. Since its implementation, our focus has been on sustaining the standardization of rounding practices and monitoring the impact of FIT on care quality […]
Abstract Number: 421
Hospital Medicine 2020, Virtual Competition
Background: VTE is associated with considerable morbidity and mortality, in fact, as many as 10% of deaths of hospitalized patients have been contributed to pulmonary embolism.1 The ACP and AACP in their 2011 and 2012 guidelines, respectively, recommend that all hospitalized patients be evaluated for risk of VTE, and subsequent prophylaxis be initiated if benefits […]
Abstract Number: 440
Hospital Medicine 2020, Virtual Competition
Background: As inpatient medical care has increased in complexity and fragmentation, rounding has become siloed away from patients and by discipline, resulting in disjointed and inefficient care models. In response, hospitalist groups across the country have been implementing unit-based rounding programs to centralize communication and align work-flow of health care team members. At UC San […]
Abstract Number: D19
SHM Converge 2022
Background: For the academic hospitalist, rounds are the cornerstone of teaching, learning, and patient care. At our institution, a study found that Internal Medicine (IM) residents on the wards spend an average of 3.4 hours rounding daily. However, most residents and attendings described rounds as “inefficient” and “low value.” With this information and with attention […]