Patient-Centered Interprofessional Collaborative Care: Factors Associated with Bedside Interprofessional Rounds

被引:41
|
作者
Gonzalo, Jed D. [1 ,2 ]
Wolpaw, Daniel R. [1 ,3 ]
Lehman, Erik [2 ]
Chuang, Cynthia H. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Penn State Univ, Coll Med, Dept Med, Hershey, PA 17033 USA
[2] Penn State Univ, Coll Med, Dept Publ Hlth Serv, Hershey, PA 17033 USA
[3] Penn State Univ, Coll Med, Kienle Ctr Humanist Med, Hershey, PA 17033 USA
关键词
interprofessional care; hospital-based care; graduate medical education; bedside rounds; ATTENDING ROUNDS; INTERDISCIPLINARY ROUNDS; CASE PRESENTATIONS; QUALITY; TRIAL;
D O I
10.1007/s11606-014-2817-x
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Medical care delivered in hospital-based medicine units requires interprofessional collaborative care (IPCC) to improve quality. However, models such as bedside interprofessional rounds, or encounters that include the team of physician and nurse providers discussing medical care at the patient's bedside, are not well studied. To examine the incidence of and time spent in bedside interprofessional rounds on internal medicine teaching services in one academic medical center. Observational descriptive study of internal medicine faculty serving as inpatient medicine attending physicians. Participants completed a daily electronic survey following team rounding sessions to assess rounding characteristics (November 2012-June 2013); variables such as resident level-of-training, attending physician years' of experience, house staff call day and clinic schedule were obtained from administrative data. Descriptive, Kruskal-Wallis, and multivariable logistic regression statistics were used to evaluate the study objectives. Primary outcomes were: (1) incidence of bedside interprofessional rounds, (2) time spent with patients during bedside interprofessional rounding encounters, and, (3) factors associated with increased occurrence of and time spent with patients during bedside interprofessional rounds. Covariates included resident level-of-training, attending physician years' of experience, census size, and call day. Of 549 rounding sessions, 412 surveys were collected (75 % response) from 25 attending physicians. Bedside interprofessional rounds occurred with 64 % of patients (median 8.0 min/encounter), differing by unit (intermediate care 81 %, general medicine 63 %, non-medicine 57 %, p < 0.001). Factors independently associated with increased occurrence of bedside interprofessional rounds were senior resident (OR 2.67, CI 1.75-4.06, PGY-3/PGY-4 vs. PGY-2), weekdays (OR 1.74, CI 1.13-2.69), team census size a parts per thousand currency sign 11 (OR 2.36, CI 1.37-4.06), and attending physicians with a parts per thousand currency sign 4 years' experience (OR 2.15, CI 1.31-3.55). Factors independently associated with increased time spent during encounters were attending physicians with a parts per thousand currency sign 4 years (OR 2.38, CI 1.44-3.95), 5-15 years of experience (OR 1.82, CI 1.10-3.02), and weekdays (OR 1.71, CI 1.10-2.65). These findings highlight factors associated with increasing or decreasing occurrence and time spent in bedside interprofessional collaborative care delivery. Systematic changes to census size caps, resident scheduling, and attending physician education and staffing may be required to increase the occurrence of interprofessional collaborative care.
引用
收藏
页码:1040 / 1047
页数:8
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