• J Emerg Nurs · Nov 2018

    Stop the Bottleneck: Improving Patient Throughput in the Emergency Department.

    • Ray DeAnda.
    • Fort Worth, TX. Electronic address: raydeanda@texashealth.org.
    • J Emerg Nurs. 2018 Nov 1; 44 (6): 582-588.

    ProblemEmergency department nurses are faced with an overwhelming number of patients each day. The average number of emergency department visits is increasing by 3.5% per year. Numerous studies have been conducted to improve the patient throughput process, which has impact on patient flow. A disruption of the process can cause a backlog of patients and create a hardship for both patients and staff.MethodsThe Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycle was used as a specific improvement methodology for improving patient throughput and served as a component for the Model for Improvement approach. The article presents a quality improvement initiative created and implemented to improve patient flow by adding a flow nurse coordinator. The flow nurse coordinator was proposed to improve patient throughput by expediting and facilitating transport of the admitted patient to an inpatient bed.ResultsThe average time from notification of bed assignment to patient arrival to an inpatient bed was 104 minutes, almost twice the proposed benchmark and more than the regional average. The results of the quality initiative changed patient arrival to inpatient bed from 104 minutes to 84 minutes, a decrease of 20%.DiscussionThe quality initiative team made several recommendations based on the research of a flow nurse coordinator. The recommendations included a weekly ED staffing committee meeting, consisting of frontline ED staff, nurse educators, ED leadership, and flow nurse coordinator. The support and active involvement of the executive leadership team would assist in sustaining changes to the new process.Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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