• Neurocritical care · Feb 2014

    Using Barriers Analysis to Refine a Novel Model of Neurocritical Care.

    • Marianne J Botting, Nicolas Phan, Gordon D Rubenfeld, Anna K Speke, and Martin G Chapman.
    • Department of Critical Care Medicine, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, University of Toronto, Room D108, 2075 Bayview Avenue, Toronto, ON, M4N3M5, Canada.
    • Neurocrit Care. 2014 Feb 1;20(1):5-14.

    BackgroundIn order to deliver specialized neurocritical care (NCC) without a dedicated neurological intensive care unit (ICU), we established a virtual NCC unit within an existing mixed level III ICU. This initiative required changes to patient allocation, physician staffing, and care protocols. In advance of its implementation, we gaged readiness, assessed barriers, and solicited feedback from staff.MethodsClinicians at our academic hospital and trauma centre in Toronto, Ontario were the subjects of this concurrent mixed methods study. Eighteen stakeholders were individually interviewed. 116 of 217 eligible ICU staff participated in the survey and 36 staff attended the focus group sessions.ResultsFrom the survey, the most significant barriers to this reorganization were staff anxiety about coping (28 %) and a concern that patients would not receive better care (24 %). Noteworthy obstacles about the use of protocols were their lack of flexibility (19 %) and that implementation was seen as impractical (16 %). Seventeen barriers were proposed through an open-ended survey question. Content analysis revealed general resistance, educational challenges, workflow adjustment to a diagnosis-based rounding pattern and coordination conflicts to be the central barriers. These findings were confirmed in focus group discussions, with a lack of resources as an additional important challenge.ConclusionsA new workable model for NCC has been developed, facilitated by this analysis. Steps to overcome barriers demonstrated in this study include additional educational measures, changes to the rounding protocols, and patient allocation algorithms.

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