the quest for quality: monitoring and measuring outcomes in continuing nursing education session 2:...
TRANSCRIPT
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The Quest for Quality:Monitoring and Measuring Outcomes in Continuing Nursing Education
Session 2: Selecting Provider Unit Outcomes Measures
Pamela S. Dickerson, PhD, RN-BC, FAANDirector of Continuing Education, Montana Nurses Association
President, PRN Continuing Education
Presented by Ohio Nurses Association and Montana Nurses Association
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Disclosures• Purpose: Participants will effectively develop
learning and provider unit processes that lead to measurable outcomes demonstrating quality patient care and/or enhanced professional development of registered nurses.
• Criteria for Successful Completion: Participate in the entire webinar. Complete the evaluation and registration information and return to ONA as directed.
• Conflict of Interest: There is no conflict of interest for any planner or presenter for this activity.
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Objective• Determine appropriate outcome measures to
guide the work of your approved provider unit.
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Self-AssessmentI know how to Strong
= 3Moderate = 2
Weak = 1
Set goals for my provider unit
Develop a quality outcome measure
Assess learning activities in relation to provider unit goals
Evaluate quality outcome measures as a way to determine provider unit effectiveness
Total Score =
5
• My total score was closest to a:
• 4• 7• 9• 12
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Our Ultimate Goal• Reflected in ANA/NNSDO Nursing Professional
Development Scope and Standards of Practice Model
• Reflected in ANCC Accreditation Program Model
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© 2010 ANA & NNSDO – Used with permission
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Accreditation Conceptual Framework, ANCC 2013 (used
with permission)
Nursing Profession
al Developme
nt: Continuing Nursing Education
Educational Design Process• Assessment of Learning Needs • Planning and Faculty• Design Principles • Achievement of Objectives
Educational Design Process• Assessment of Learning Needs • Planning and Faculty• Design Principles • Achievement of Objectives
Quality Outcomes• Evaluation Process• Evaluation Participation• Goals for Improvement• Value/Benefit to Nursing Professional Development
Quality Outcomes• Evaluation Process• Evaluation Participation• Goals for Improvement• Value/Benefit to Nursing Professional Development
Structural Capacity
• Commitment• Accountability• Leadership• Resources
Structural Capacity
• Commitment• Accountability• Leadership• Resources
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What Is A Quality Measure?
• “Quality measures are metrics, indicators or ratings which provide some insight into the quality of care that patients are receiving in a particular setting or place”. - Pennsylvania Health Care Quality Alliance
• Following that line of thought, quality measures in continuing education are metrics that provide some insight into the quality of the work of our provider units that contributes to quality patient care and nursing professional development.
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Quality Measures Abound
• Common examples of quality measures:
o Your most recent performance appraisal
o Amount of money in your checking account
o Number of dust bunnies under your bed
o Amount of gas in your car
o Your child’s PSAT score
o Amount of chocolate in your house
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Examples of Outcomes Measures:Health Care Organizations
• Morbidity
• Mortality
• Healthcare Facility-Acquired Infections
• Readmission Rates
• Patient Satisfaction (HCAHPS)
• Quality of Life
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Examples of Outcomes Measures:Nursing (NDNQI)
Clinical• Falls• Symptoms, e.g. pain• Central line infections• Catheter-associated
UTIs• Ventilator associated
pneumonia rate• Pressure ulcers• Other…
Professional• Nurse hours per
patient day• Nursing skill mix• RN education and
certification• Retention• Work environment• Other…
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Measuring Outcomes
• Outcome: “The impact of structure and process on the organization…and the value/benefit to nursing professional development.” (ANCC, 2013).
• Outcome Measurement: “The process of observing, describing, and quantifying predefined indicators of outcomes of performance.” (ANA/NNSDO, 2010)
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Quality Outcomes Measure
• A measurable component of the structure or process of a provider that demonstrates the effectiveness of the provider unit.
• Examples:o Number of nurse planners (PU outcome measure)o Number of learning activities that include active
learner participation (PU outcome measure)o Patient care outcome related to educational
content (professional development/impact on care outcome measure)
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Relationship of Quality Outcome Measures to Goals
• Goal: What the provider unit will accomplish in the year
• Outcome Measure: What evidence will be collected to determine goal achievement – how will we know if we’re successful?
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Example• PU Goal: Improve the diversity of learning activities
available to nurses in our target market area.
• Outcome measures might include:o Number of “live” activities compared to previous
yearo Number of web-based activities compared to
previous yearo Number of interprofessional activities compared to
previous yearo Number of published independent studies compared
to previous year
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Comparison with a Learning Activity
• For a learning activity, the goal might be that learners will provide more person-centered care to patients with dementia.
• Measurable outcomes might be:o Observation of behaviors o Report of family memberso Decreased number of care-related complaints o Calmer behavior of patients
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Evaluation in Context: ActivityTarget
AudienceNeeds
Assessment
Gap Analysis
Purpose
Objectives
Content/ Teaching Methods
Short-term
Evaluation
Outcome Long term
evaluation)
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Name of Session: Facilitator:
Date: Location:
Attendance (to be inserted for summative) Contact Hours:
Please indicate your achievement of each objective:
Yes No
1. ___ ___
2. ___ ___
Please provide your response to each item:
The facilitator was effective in teaching the subject. ___ ___
This session provided a good way for me to
learn this content. ___ ___
What did you learn today that will strengthen your practice or personal behavior?
What one change will you make in your practice as a result of participating in this activity?
Generic Evaluation
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Generic Evaluation (cont’d)
What barriers do you think will make it difficult to implement what you have learned?
What needs to happen to overcome these barriers?
What more would you like to learn about this topic?
Comments:
Suggestions for future topics (please indicate what you would like to know about and WHY this is important in your practice):
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Evaluation in Context: Provider UnitGoals for Provider
Unit
Outcome Measures
Provider Unit Structure &
Function
Learning Activities
Activity Evaluation
Outcome Measurement for
Provider Unit
PSD, 2013
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Building Blocks
• Activity outcomes are specific to one learning activity. (EDP 13)
• Activities should be designed with provider unit goals in mind.
• Outcomes measures allow you to look at data in the aggregate to determine if provider unit goals are met. (QO 4, 5)
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Your Turn• Write a goal for your provider unit for 2014.
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Your Turn• Based on the goal you wrote, write the outcome
measure or measures that will provide evidence of achieving that goal (or not).
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Provider Outcomes Measures: Ideas
• Cost-effectiveness of PU operations (may include return on investment)
• Turnover of nurse planners• Number of educational activities provided• Types of educational activities offered• Quality of learning activities
o Learner perceptiono Faculty feedbacko Effective in filling the identified gap
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Example
• Provider unit goal for 2013: Increase the number of nurse planners so that there is a nurse planner for every clinical area.
• Outcome measures:o Number of nurse plannerso Representation of clinical areas among nurse
planners
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What Was The Outcome?
• December, 2012 – 6 nurse planners for hospital with 1400 nurse employees; ED, critical care areas, OR/PACU, and palliative care did not have nurse planner representation
• January, 2014 – 10 nurse planners plus primary nurse planner – all clinical areas have nurse planner representation
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Outcomes - Visually
Nurse Planners Clinical Areas Represented0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
20122014
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Professional Development Outcomes Measures: Ideas
• Leadership skills• Healthy work environment• Healthy lifestyle / role modeling• Critical thinking skills• Nurse advocacy
o For patientso For the professiono For the community – health promotion
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Goal Example• Provide quality continuing education to all of our
nurses.
• Is this an effective goal statement?o Yeso No
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Goal Example• Provide quality continuing education
• This is very broad – what is quality? What kind of measurement could I use to evaluate it? What does success look like?
• Commonly used: Maintain approved provider status – so what?
• Hint: If you can’t think of an outcome measure for it, it probably isn’t a strong PU goal!
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Goal Example• Provide targeted continuing education to hospice
nurses in 2014 based on gap analysis data to increase patient’s perceptions of quality of care at the end of life by the end of the year.
• Is this an effective goal statement?o Yeso No
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Why Is This Goal Stronger? • Provide targeted continuing education to hospice
nurses in 2014 based on gap analysis data to increase patient’s perceptions of quality of care at the end of life by the end of the year.
• Outcome is clear• Outcome measures can be selected:
o Number of hospice nurses engaged (PU)o Number of activities based on gap analysis
data (PU)o Patient perceptions of QOL (NPD)
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Revisit Your Goal• Is the outcome clear? Will you know when
success has been achieved?
• Are there clearly evident outcome measures? Do you know what data you will collect to demonstrate success?
• Are your outcomes related too The work of your provider unit? (QO 4)o Professional development of nurse learners? (QO 5)
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Our Accountability in Nursing Professional Development
• Standard 3 (Outcomes Identification):
o Develops outcomes that reflect professional role competence, learning and change
o Documents outcomes, including those that demonstrate learning and program impact.
ANA/NNSDO, 2010
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Our Accountability in Nursing Professional
Development
• Standard 6 (Evaluation):
o Selects valid, reliable, and relevant methods and instruments to measure processes and outcomes.
o Synthesizes evaluation data, trends, and expectations to guide decision-making about changes and improvement of all components of NPD practice
ANA/NNSDO, 2010
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Our Accountability in Nursing Professional Development
• Standard 16 (Leadership):
o Influences decision-making bodies to maintain and improve quality nursing and professional development programs
o Promotes the professional development program mission, goals, action plans, and outcome measures.
ANA/NNSDO, 2010
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Self-AssessmentI know how to Strong
= 3Moderate = 2
Weak = 1
Set goals for my provider unit
Develop an outcome measure
Assess learning activities in relation to provider unit goals
Evaluate outcome measures as a way to determine provider unit effectiveness
Your Score:
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• My total score was closest to a:
• 4• 7• 9• 12
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Summary• Outcomes measures for your provider unit help
you to define and measure goal achievement.
• Quantifying and sharing of outcomes data is expected as part of our role as nursing professional development specialists.
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Questions and Discussion
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For Additional Information
Pam Dickerson, PhD, RN-BC, FAAN
[email protected]@mtnurses.org
Zandra Ohri, MA, MS, RN
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References• American Nurses Association & National Nursing Staff
Development Organization (2010). Nursing Professional Development: Scope and Standards of Practice. Silver Spring, MD. Nursesbooks.org
• American Nurses Credentialing Center. (2013). 2013 ANCC Primary Accreditation Application Manual for Providers and Approvers. Revision 3.0. Silver Spring, MD. Author.
• National Database for Nursing Quality Indicators. (2013). Data. Retrieved from https://www.nursingquality.org/data.aspx
• Pennsylvania Health Care Quality Alliance. (2013). Our Measures. Retrieved from http://www.phcqa.org/measures/