Transcript Slide 1
Delivering Care: Nurse Staffing in
Northern Ireland
9th April 2014
WSCNTL 2014, Kings Hall
Leading Care, Leading Teams - Innovating and Supporting Person-Centred Care
‘Mrs Harry denies a series of charges dating between
1998 and 2006 and related to alleged failures to ensure
adequate nursing staffing levels and appropriate
standards of record keeping, hygiene and cleanliness,
administration of medication, provision of nutrition and
fluids and patient dignity.’
Why?
Professional
To promote a
shared
understanding
Focus on safe,
effective
Person-centred
Practice
Finance
HR
Why Define a Range?
• Reasonable starting point
• Not prescriptive for every minute of each shift
• Variety of factors influence planning processes
Page 4, 2.10 - exceptions
How did we define
the ranges?
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PHA
HSC Trusts
DHSSPS
NIPEC
HSCB
HR Reps
Staff side
PCC
Phase 1
Adult, hospital based acute care
settings in:
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General and Specialist Medicine
General and Specialist Surgery
Process
Underpinned by:
• Existing academic knowledge
• Existing information of current workforce
picture from HSC trusts
• International and national intelligence
around workforce planning in nursing
• External Critical Review
• Engagement with stakeholders
Outcomes
Delivering Care, Part 1
Assumptions of the
Framework
Staffing Ranges
Assumptions of the Framework
Key Performance Indicators
PUAA
Skill Mix
Management of Recruitment
Influencing Factors
Key Performance Indicators
Phase 1
Organisational:
• absence rates within nursing and midwifery teams;
• normative staffing ranges - including vacancy rates.
Safe and Effective Care:
• incidence of pressure ulcers
• falls
• omitted or delayed medications
Patient Experience:
• consistent delivery of nursing/midwifery care against
identified need
• involvement of the person receiving care in decisions
made about their nursing/midwifery care
• time spent by nurses and midwives with the patient
‘Should quality indicators begin to fall below the accepted
level of achievement, staffing levels should be reviewed as
one of the lines of enquiry of attributable causes.’
Planned and Unplanned Absence Allowance
What is it?
Periods of absence from work, which are expected or unexpected
and, therefore, factored into the workforce planning process.
Comprises:
• Annual leave
• Sickness absence
• Study leave
Year
2013
Annual
Leave:
15%
Evidence base:
• Telford (1979)
• Other professions: Consultant Contract
Framework (2003) , BASW UK
Supervision Policy (2011)
• Auditor General Scotland (2002)
Sick Leave: Study
Leave:
5%
4%
Total
Allowance
24%
Assumptions of the Framework
• Skill Mix – 70:30 general medicine and surgery; other
care settings will vary
• Management of Recruitment- nursing vacancies are
filled within a prompt timescale
• Influencing Factors
Influencing Factors
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Workforce
•
Environment and Support
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Activity
•
Professional Regulatory
Requirements
Influencing Factors
• Workforce
Term Used
How is this defined?
Impact?
% Bed
Occupancy
A measurement of the
percentage of time that beds
are occupied, measured at
midnight. Day cases and ward
attendees are excluded from
the calculation.
Average Daily Occupied Beds
----------------------------------------Average Daily Available Beds
x 100
Capturing bed occupancy at 12.00 midnight only can
result in substantial activity and workload being
omitted. Comparing bed occupancy at 12.00 midday
and 12.00 midnight can provide valuable management
information.
The Government’s Emergency Services Action Team
(ESAT) report in 1997 included analyses showing that
in acute hospitals, average bed occupancy rates over
85% are associated with rapidly growing problems in
handling emergency admissions.
• Activity
• Environment and Support
• Professional Regulatory Activity
Nurse Staffing Range for General and Specialist Adult Hospital
Medical and Surgical Care settings
So what?
How to Use the Framework
Section 2
SCENARIOS
WS/CN
WS/CN
WS/CN/
• Use the influencing factors
• Analyse care setting
• Use existing workforce tool
• Determine Required Funded Establishment
• Calculate point on the range
• Discuss findings
• Agree action plan
ADN/LM
EDoN/
ADN
• Approve plan
Painting a Picture…
24 bedded medical ward with:
• 8 specialist respiratory beds for people with
increasing dependency related to respiratory
needs e.g. use of Non-Invasive Ventilation
(NIV)
• 16 general medical beds
Influencing Factors
• Competence skill set to work
flexibly
• Management of absenteeism
• Workforce
• Activity
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% Bed Occupancy
Throughput
Acuity/Dependency
Length of Stay
Seasonal Variations
Specialities/ case mix
• Environment and Support
• Geographical layout/room
structure
• Professional Regulatory Activity
• Compliance with professional
regulatory standards
• Supervision
• Accountability and governance
requirements
Some numbers…
8 specialist
beds:
16 general beds:
Some numbers…
Total registered staff = 24.63 WTE
Total unregistered staff = 10.32 WTE
Funded Establishment = 34.95 WTE
Total Nursing / bed = 1.46 (1.79(8)/ 1.29 (16))
Skill mix = 70:30
(does not include any time for Ward Sister
Charge Nurse Allocation)
Some numbers…
24 beds:
And finally….
Ward Sisters/Charge Nurses....
Page 10, Part 1, Section 1 states:
‘Skill mix should take account of an allocation of 100%
of a Ward Sister’s/Charge Nurse’s time to fulfil their:
ward leadership responsibilities; supervise clinical
care; oversee and maintain nursing care standards;
teach clinical practice and procedures; be a role
model for good professional practice and behaviours;
oversee the ward environment and assume high
visibility as nurse leader for the ward.’
Supervisory.......
What they
said....
• Highly visible
• Visible to patients and their families/carers
• Visible to other members of the Multi-professional
team
• Leading and directing towards shared goal and vision
• Support and teach team
• Role model
• Deal with underperformance of staff members
efficiently
• General performance management
Focus Groups
Personal and
professional
Team
Patient and
family/carers
Increased job satisfaction
Improved support
Improved patient
experience
Better time management
Improved visibility
Patients, families and
carers better informed
Better planning
Improved team morale
Patient flow improved
Less stress
Increased team job
satisfaction
Key Performance
Indicators and dash
boards improving
Less work completed at
home
Training needs met
Diffusing difficult issues
Being visible
Reduction of SAIs
Reduced length of stay
Being able to complete
managerial tasks
Improved team
communication
Promote good standards
of care
Focus Groups
Personal and
professional
Team
Patient and
family/carers
Implement new
initiatives
Valuing team and
individual contributions
Promote communication
Better overview of the
ward
Teach staff
Improve the patient
journey
Better management of
sick leave
Training needs met
Expedite discharge
Able to attend multiprofessional meetings
Recognise teams
strengths and
weaknesses
Manage – not crisis
manage
Improved handovers
Able to be a role model
Improved induction for
new staff
Be able to get breaks!
Succession planning
Focus Groups
Personal and
professional
Team
Record keeping up-todate
Pastoral support and care
of team
Dash board figures up-todate
Complete appraisals
Oversee standard of care
Talk to patients and their
families/carers
Heaven!
Patient and
family/carers
So..... How do we measure these?
Some Questions....
1. Is the indicator measurable?
2. Is this something I have direct influence over
to impact?
3. Will the indicator change positively as a
direct result of the implementation of 100%
supervisory status?
4. If that status was removed would the
indicator change negatively?
Personal and professional
Indicators
Team Indicators
Patient and family/carers
Indicators
Increased job satisfaction through survey
Increased referrals to Occ. Health
Improved standards of care – KPIs and
audits
Evidence of keeping clinical skills up-todate
Increase in return to work interviews
Increased standard of patient
experience – patient satisfaction
surveys
Reduction in SAIs and near misses
Improved competence
Reduction in formal complaints
Increase in number of appraisals being
completed
Increased job satisfaction – survey
Increase in written compliments
Increase in supervision being completed
Training needs correctly identified
Reduced length of stay
Reduction in personal sickness/absence
rates
Evidence of celebration of good
performance
Evidence of improved discharge
processes
Increase in number of audits completed
Evidence of succession planning
Increased numbers of emails being
responded to
Reduction in sickness/absence rates
Improved standard of record keeping
practice
Increased frequency in team
meetings
Evidence of increased numbers of
innovations being introduced to ward
Increased frequency in safety
briefings
Better management of off duty rosters
Mandatory training for all staff up-todate
People we care for at the Centre
Safe, Effective and Person
Centred.....