RR - April 15 2013 - Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre
Transcription
RR - April 15 2013 - Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre
Royal Review April 15, 2013 People Dates to remember Healthy Aging Forum April 16 Auditorium 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Skills Expo April 18 & 19 Auditorium 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Free lunch for staff Radio for Radiation Benefit concert V April 20 Loverboy, Prism and RVH’s Vital Organs Casino Rama Walk in My Shoes April 25 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Contact: Iris Laycock [email protected] Save Lives, Clean Your Hands Day May 7 Activities scheduled throughout the Health Centre WE LOVE OUR VOLUNTEERS! Tell a member of RVH’s Blue Brigade just how much you appreciate them during Volunteer Appreciation Week, April 21 to 27. You can start with our Atrium Entrance Information Desk Volunteers - Shirley Knapp, Janet Pavan or Meril Cunningham. But don't wait until then—you can tell them they are great anytime. Quality RVH Quality Plan The top priority at Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre remains providing safe, high-quality care. One of the many ways RVH plans for and ensures we deliver on that promise is through our annual Quality Improvement Plan (QIP). This is a plan that sets clear targets and is required under the provincial government’s Excellent Care for All Act. The 2013-2014 plan is focused on creating a positive patient experience, to ensure we are taking every measure possible to deliver on our promise of delivering safe, high-quality care. This year’s highest priorities include: • reducing hospital acquired C. difficile rates • reducing our percentage of Alternate Level of Care (ALC) bed days • reducing wait times for Emergency department patients who have been admitted to hospital • improving patient satisfaction • increasing hand hygiene rates prior to patient contact RVH takes quality improvement very seriously and is committed to achieving the ambitious targets we set for our organization. In fact, we have adopted a pay-forperformance mechanism which ties 5 per cent of the President and CEO’s compensation and 3 per cent of the Vice President’s compensation directly to the successful achievement of our QIP targets. Each area of focus within our QIP fits within one of our four corporate pillars of quality, service, people and finance, ensuring our QIP goals are the same as our corporate goals. And the means by which we will achieve our QIP goals are the same things we do each and every day at RVH, such as post-discharge phone calls, standardized introductions, shift-to-shift transfer of care at the bedside and of course, hand hygiene compliance. As a way to demonstrate our commitment to accountability and transparency, a progress report on our 2012-13 Quality Improvement Plan, as well as the 201314 plan are posted on the RVH website at www.rvh.on.ca/QIP.aspx. RVH Royal Review April 15, 2013 Quality MP Brown visits Rotary House Quality March Hand Hygiene Dialysis Jennifer Hickling, Nursing Sarah Rutherford, Nursing PACU – Phase I Dr. Hugh Taylor Pat Griffen, Environmental Services Carol Matton, Nursing PACU – Phase II Natalie McDowell, Nursing Chemotherapy Suite Lori Kennedy, Nursing Imaging Tara Stidam, Nursing Jackie Swales, Nursing Patrick Brown, Member of Parliament for Barrie, recently toured Rotary House, RVH’s lodge for patients receiving cancer treatment at the Simcoe Muskoka Regional Cancer Centre (SMRCC), with Janice Skot, RVH president and CEO. During his tour he met with Rotary House guests Brenda Sawyer (left), and Eileen and Michael Baron, all from Huntsville. Sawyer says she feels so at home at the lodge that when her cancer treatments are done at the end of the week she doesn’t want to go home. The lodge, located on the second floor of Rotary Place, features 20 hotelstyle rooms, a business centre, a relaxation room, a kitchen, a private terrace and activity rooms. Rotary Place was named in honour of a remarkable $1.5 million pledge from Rotary Clubs throughout the region to the “I Believe” campaign. Capital Redevelopment More room on Mental Health The Mental Health and Addictions program team is celebrating the completion of the renovations on 3SC. In March, Mental Health Day programs relocated to this area. Additional inpatient rooms that were built to accommodate the 11 beds transferred to RVH from Waypoint Centre for Mental Health are now also Top from left: Jennifer Hallett, Cathie Gilliopen. gan and Denise Mosco. Bottom: Brittany Mauro, Walter Wojcik and Bobbi Breedon Page 2 As part of Save Lives, Clean Your Hands Day on May 7, a new hand hygiene compliance poster will be displayed on inpatient units. Representatives from Infection Prevention and Control will be updating these posters with unit-specific hand hygiene compliance rates so you can see, at a glance, how your team is doing - and support each other to reach a 100% target. Inspiring care... RVH Royal Review April 15, 2013 Children Colour Their Cares Away At RVH Julie McKendry is back from maternity leave, taking on the role of Manager, Finance, leading the month-end processes and audit. She is also RVH’s COHPA representative, overseeing accounts payable. Dr. Bruce Burke retired at the end of March after 27 years of medical practice as a cardiologist. Dr. Burke served as RVH’s Chief of Medicine for a decade as well as serving terms as Vice President and President of the medical staff. RVH cardiologist Dr. Brad Dibble is among the speakers at the L3 Writer’s Conference on April 18 at 7 p.m. at Barrie North Collegiate. Dr. Dibble will talk to science students about his book Comprehending the Climate Crisis. Tickets are available at the door: $20 for adults, $10 for students. Inspiring care... Karissa Kane, a pupil at Pine River Elementary School in Angus, was one of 36 young artists to have their work selected and published in the colouring book - Colour Your Cares Away. The book is a community project created by the South Simcoe Arts Council and features drawings from pupils in 15 area schools. The books were packaged with crayons and donated to area hospitals. Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre (RVH) received 1,000 of the colouring books which will be given to youngsters in the Emergency and Paediatric departments. Kane is shown with her drawing of a Fairy, and Jan Atkinson, South Simcoe Arts Council Community Project Co-ordinator. People Oncology Nurses Flash Mob In an effort to raise awareness for Oncology Nurses and those they care for, a Flash Mob was held again this year in the main lobby. Nurses and intra-professional team members who partner with them joined the celebration. The nurses danced to celebrate, but also to remember those we’ve lost to cancer, and concluded with a short prayer. All Oncology Nurses across the country danced to the same music at similar times. Look for the video on YouTube as well as the RVH intranet. Many thanks to all those who went the extra mile to make this happen. http://oncologynursingday.com/category/events/flashmobs/ Got an inspiring story to share? Want to offer kudos or compliments to a colleague? How about achievements, awards and accolades? Share the news—send your ideas to Donna Danyluk at [email protected] by the 8th and 22nd of each month. Page 3 April 15, 2013 RVH Royal Review Purposeful Rounding positively affects the patient experience Regina Gagliano asks Joan Cruickshank about her pain level—again! “It’s much better, but without the medication I don’t think I could function,” says Cruickshank. Gagliano, an RN on RVH’s Respiratory Unit, adjusts Cruickshank’s pain medication as the elderly women settles in for a restful sleep. Gagliano has asked Cruickshank the same question every hour and oddly the patient never tires of being asked. “I’ve been in this health centre for two months now and I can tell you that the only reason I’m alive is because of the excellent care from the doctors and nurses here,” says Cruickshank. An important component in her care is something called Purposeful Rounding, just one of RVH’s be excellent! clinical tactics being rolled-out across the health centre to ensure safe, high quality care and service excellence. “It is a proactive way of providing care in which healthcare professionals round with purpose every hour on their patients,” says Tracey Fletcher, Respiratory Unit Manager. “Patients know that every hour their nurse will be checking on them and so they are less likely to attempt to go to the bathroom themselves, which often results in falls. They seem happier and use their call bells less often because they know their nurse will be coming in to see them.” In fact, statistics show better clinical outcomes for patients when Purposeful Rounding is done. For example there is a 50 per cent reduction in falls, improved patient satisfaction and a 37.8 per cent decrease in call bells – saving nurses approximately 81.5 hours weekly. Fletcher also believes purposeful rounding helps nurses to manage their days better as they are being proactive and not reactive. Purposeful Rounding is a prescribed communication tool to ensure the patient’s experience is optimum. While rounding, nurses cover eight topics: AIDET, (personal standardized introduction), to reduce anxiety; they address pain, elimination and position; assess additional comfort needs; conduct environmental assessment; ask, “Is there anything else I can do for you? I have time”; tell their patient when they will be back; and they document the process in a rounding log posted in the patient’s room. . First Mayes Martin/Café Royale winner! Operation Red Nose Merline Lindsay, RPN, Emergency department, is the happy winner of the first $100 gas gift voucher from Mayes Martin Limited in the Café Royale Get Gas contest. Every time you make a purchase of $5 or more at Café Royale, your name is entered in the draw. A winner will be selected each month. More than 80 volunteers from Base Borden participated in Operation Red Nose this past holiday season, giving rides home after holiday parties in return for a donation. A portion of the funds raised - $1,327.60 - was donated to RVH in support of the planned Child and Youth Mental Health Inpatient Unit. Café Royale manager Deb Scharf (left) and RVH Auxiliary president Wayne Hubbard (right) present Merline Lindsay with her gas voucher. Col. Tammy Harris, Commanding Officer at CFB Borden (2nd from left) and members of her team presented proceeds from the 2012 Operation Red Nose campaign to RVH Foundation CEO Eric Dean. Page 4 Inspiring care...