The Future of Healthcare Communication: IP Nurse Call Systems

In the healthcare industry, communication is not just important—it’s critical. The introduction of IP Nurse Call systems is a technological leap transforming the healthcare communications landscape. With features like central administration, integration with smart devices, and the ability to interconnect with other systems seamlessly, these systems are setting a new standard for efficient patient care. Let’s explore how IP Nurse Call systems are reshaping the future of healthcare.

Central Administration for Scalable Healthcare

IP Nurse Call systems function on a robust computer network where every component has a unique address, allowing for centralized control. This is especially advantageous for large healthcare facilities or enterprises that require scalability. Central administration means that as a healthcare facility grows, the nurse call system can easily expand, without compromising on efficiency or performance.

Seamless Connection with Smart Devices

The true power of IP technology is its ability to send alerts to various smart devices. Whether it’s a pager, a smartphone, or even using VoIP for direct communication between patients and caregivers, IP Nurse Call systems are at the forefront of utilizing modern communication methods. With apps available for both iOS and Android, caregivers can stay informed and responsive no matter where they are in the facility.

Integration with Other Systems

One of the standout features of IP Nurse Call systems is their ability to integrate with other clinical or building systems without the need for middleware. This integration can include Real-Time Location Systems (RTLS), fire and security systems, smart beds, electronic medical records (EMR/EHR), smart pumps, telemetry devices, and even patient infotainment systems. This level of integration ensures that the nurse call system is a hub of communication, not just a standalone solution.

Customized Responses to Different Call Types

IP Nurse Call systems can discern between various call types—whether a patient needs assistance going to the bathroom, requires water, or is experiencing pain. This intelligent differentiation allows for calls to be routed appropriately, ensuring that the right staff member responds in a timely manner. This specificity in communication helps streamline tasks and improves overall patient care.

Data Storage for Audits and Reporting

With IP Nurse Call systems, every piece of data—from alarm times and locations to the type of call and response times—is captured and stored in a database. This data is invaluable for audits and reporting, allowing healthcare administrators to analyze and optimize response strategies and staff performance.

IT-Friendly Deployment

Deployment of an IP Nurse Call system is designed to be IT-friendly, often requiring just virtual servers and standard network switches. A well-designed system should minimize the need for multiple servers and operate on standard, managed network infrastructure, simplifying deployment.

Future-Proofing Your Investment

The beauty of investing in IP technology is its longevity and adaptability. As the Internet of Things (IoT) expands, IP Nurse Call systems will continue to evolve, allowing healthcare facilities to integrate new devices and technologies as they become available. This adaptability ensures that healthcare facilities can grow and expand their capabilities without overhauling their communication infrastructure.

Conclusion

IP Nurse Call systems represent a significant advancement in healthcare communication technology. By enabling centralized administration, integration with smart devices, and seamless system interoperability, these systems are not only improving healthcare. They are also paving the way for future innovations. For healthcare facilities looking to invest in a communication system that is efficient, scalable, and future-proof, IP Nurse Call systems are a clear choice.

Healthcare communication is on the brink of a revolution, with the Austco Tacera Nurse Call system leading the charge. Connect with us for more insights into how technology improves patient care!

To learn more, contact our global teams – click here

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What is patient-centered care?

Whether you have a small aged-care facility or a large hospital, you have probably heard about patient-centered care.

The patient-centered care model is making many healthcare facilities in the world shift their business model and focus their care more around the needs, preferences and outcomes relevant to patients and their families.

Although the concept has been around for a while, there is still some confusion about what the model actually is. In broad-terms, patient-centered care is based on the principle of a person’s individual needs and preferences being the central consideration during their care. This involves providing respect, emotional support, physical comfort; information that motivates and prepares patients across all the stages of their condition, continuity care coordination, as well as involving family and carers.

But why bother with patient-centered care?

There are number of studies that provide evidence that the patient-centered model is more effective. A study conducted by Stone for example, compared the performance of two similar hospitals over five years. The first hospital was using an extensive patient-centered program and the other one was not. The study demonstrates that in the hospital where patient-centered care was implemented, patients experienced a shorter average length of stay, a significantly lower cost per case, and higher than average overall patient satisfaction scores.    

Additionally, in recent times, the effectiveness of the model has been recognized by governments around the world. Countries like the US and the UK, for example, had recently implemented patient survey programs to collect patient’s feedback at a national level.

The US in particular, has given the patient care model greater attention by financially penalizing or rewarding hospitals according to their patient satisfaction scores and by releasing data from the HCAHPS survey to the public.

Based on that, we can conclude that as patients become more informed by researching hospitals, their selection of a hospital is more likely to be impacted by patient experience survey results.

So how can you shift your current business model to patient centered care?

To thrive in patient-centered care, your facility needs to invest in six major areas. This will allow you to apply the model in a holistic way and reach the desired outcomes.

Communication Strategy

The first step your facility should look into is a communication strategy. Communication is critical for a patient-centered model to function and it needs to be taught and honed throughout the entire facility.

By communicating and educating staff about the care concept and helping them introduce it into their daily routines, your staff will transform their role from being characterized as an authority to one that has the goals of partnership, solidarity and empathy to patients.

Here are some initiatives your facility could use to develop communication:

  • Develop and use verbal communication guidelines for staff,
  • Scripting tools and cues for effectively communicating with patients
  • Communication boards with information such as staff member names and the date and time scheduled for specific procedures.
Patient and Family involvement

Patients and families involvement are also essential for the patient-centered care model and deserve greater attention. It is important that facilities provide support and information to patients and their families and encourage them to take ownership of their own health.

Examples include, providing information during the point of care delivery, giving them access to medical records and patient progress notes; and running educational programs where patients can understand more about their condition and participate in the process of healthcare planning.

Supportive work environment

The quality of care and how supportive a work environment is considered are directly linked. It may seem to be so obvious to not warrant mentioning, but it is true that when staff feel cared for, and enjoy their work environment, they provide better care to patients. That’s why facilities that want to build a patient care environment need to invest in initiatives that try to improve staff satisfaction and provide training, evaluation, compensation and support to their employees.

Measurements and Feedback

It is important that facilities systematically measure and monitor the feedback from patients and families. This can be done through patient experience surveys and by measuring rates of complaint. It is also mandatory that facilities monitor the impact of their strategy changes so they can understand what works and what does not.

Quality of the built environment

Another important factor you should consider is the quality of the built environment. Studies show that a facility’s design can influence many aspects of care, including improved interaction, better information flows between carers and patients, and increased staff efficiency to list a few.

Technology

Interaction between patient and health staff is key for patient-centered care. In order for the model to work, facilities need to meet patient’s needs and preferences at the right time, in the right setting, for the right reason, and at the right cost.

Technology can be a facility’s greatest ally to improve information exchange.  Studies from Finkelstein (2012) concluded that by selecting technologies that help facilities to gather, store, share and use information, facilities can be more efficient, more effective and more focused on meeting the needs of patients.

So what do Nurse Call Systems have to do with Patient-Centered Care?

Suppliers of Hospital technology including manufacturers of nurse call systems are raising the bar and placing more emphasis on providing patient-centered care solutions. There are questions in the American patient satisfaction (HCAHPS) scores that directly relate to the effectiveness of the Nurse Call System. The reason for this is that with the right communication tools, hospitals can drastically improve their communication with patients resulting in higher HCAHPS scores.  

Below are a few examples on how Austco Nurse Call Systems can improve the patient experience in your facility:

Nurse/Doctor Communication – Improve Response Times
Austco Nurse Call Systems allow nurses and doctors to be called directly on pagers, wireless devices or at the nurse’s station. By enabling direct voice communication between the patient and staff, Nurse Call Systems virtually eliminate unwanted noise. This all adds up to a quieter and more healing environment.

In addition to that, the numerous alerting options including phones, pagers, workstations and consoles available in Austco Nurse Call Systems ensure that the right staff receive the alert almost immediately. In case the staff member is busy or with another patient, our advanced call configuration will send the message to backup staff.

Finally, our systems provide reporting capabilities that allow management to analyze call response times through either calls of staff members so they will know exactly how long patients are waiting and can adjust processes if needed.

Quieter Environment
Direct messaging to staff has practically eliminated unwanted noise. Implementing a quiet, healing environment has proven to result in happier patients and faster recoveries.

Hourly Rounding
If a hospital is scoring high for fast response to call requests, patient/caregivers communication and in other areas, you can be sure that they are doing their rounds hourly. Automatic rounding reminders are activated with the push of a button on Austco touch duty Station. Having a standard rounding schedule can help staff meet patient needs before a lapse is detected.

Pain Management
A few things are more related to patient satisfaction than relieving pain, but pain management is about more than stopping pain. It is also about building a foundation of trust between patients and caregivers, which ties in to quality of care level of patient satisfaction, and higher patient experience survey scores.  Using Austco staff terminal to schedule regular pain assessments, patients can better help manage a patient’s pain.

Austco pillow speakers are also equipped with pain management button that allow patients to contact the correct caregiver to provide pain relief.

Workflows
Austco system also allows hospitals to have access to a tremendous amount of real, actionable data, providing their organization with the tools they need to systematically examine workflows, alerts and escalations that happen once a call is placed from a patient’s room.

Conclusion

Patient-centered care is a model in which providers need to consider the individual preferences, needs and values of patients in clinical decisions and procedures. Studies proves that facilities adopting the model, experience great improvements in quality of care, safety, staff and patient satisfaction as well as decrease their costs.

Knowing that technology plays a key role in patient centered care, technology manufacturers are working hard to create patient-centered care solutions. Nurse Call Systems are one example of technology that has proved to be an important tool for improved patient satisfaction, especially due to the system ability to exchange information and improve areas such as nurse/doctor communication response, healing environment; hourly rounding and pain management.

References

http://www.safetyandquality.gov.au/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/PCCC-DiscussPaper.pdf

http://www.ache.org/PUBS/JHM/57-5/57-5_Cliff_PCC.pdf

http://www.thepermanentejournal.org/issues/2012/summer/4809-patient-centered-care.html

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Ways to combat alarm fatigue in hospitals

We’ve all been to hospitals and heard the constant sounds of beeps and tones – which hospital nurses hear all day long. Ventilators, infusion pumps, and blood pressure monitors are just some of the several hundred alarms per patient per day, which are causing alarm fatigue.

These are the beeps, rings and tones that come from different monitors and devices attached to patients. The alarms may be real or false, but these life critical alarms cannot be ignored.

Over time, hospital caregivers become desensitized and overwhelmed by the noises – a dangerous situation, as a patient’s life could be at risk.

Reduce Alarm Fatigue

In the United States, The Joint Commission, which accredits U.S. hospitals and other healthcare organizations, has issued a sentinel event alert to hospitals about the need to reduce “alarm fatigue” related to alarms set off by monitoring devices. This term refers to situations in which clinicians ignore or turn off the alarms that they find irrelevant or annoying.

Factors that contribute to alarm-related sentinel events include:

  • Alarm fatigue – the most common contributing factor
  • Alarm settings that are not customized to the individual patient or patient population
  • Inadequate staff training on the proper use and functioning of the equipment
  • Inadequate staffing to support or respond to alarm signals
  • Alarm conditions and settings that are not integrated with other medical devices
  • Equipment malfunctions and failures

Since 2007, ECRI Institute has reported on the dangers related to alarm systems. In its annually published “Top 10 Health Technology Hazards” list, clinical alarm conditions consistently appear as the first or second most critical hazard, reflecting both the frequency and serious consequences of alarm-related problems.

In addition, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) Manufacturer and User Facility Device Experience (MAUDE) database reveals that 566 alarm-related patient deaths were reported between January 2005 and June 2010, a figure that is considered by industry experts to underrepresent the actual number of incidents.

Cut Through the Noise

Alarm fatigue also occurs when a true life-threatening event is lost in a cacophony of noise because of the multitude of devices with competing alarm signals, all trying to capture someone’s attention, without clarity around what that someone is supposed to do. It is compounded by inconsistent alarm system functions (alerting, providing information, suggesting action, directing action, or taking action) or inconsistent alarm system characteristics (information provided, integration, degree of processing, prioritization).

Patients also experience alarm fatigue, as they are unable to rest with the multitude of alarm tones going off within their room.

Direct messaging and calls to staff have practically eliminated the need for overhead paging and noise. Implementing a quiet, healing environment has proven to result in healthier and happier patients.

Communication Solutions

Alarm fatigue is a system failure that results from technology driving processes rather than processes driving technology. Austco Communication Systems, a worldwide provider of IP Nurse Call Solutions, uses mobile communication to eliminate the need for alarms to be broadcasted throughout the hospital floor or unit.

For example, when a patient presses the nurse call button for assistance, a notification is automatically sent to the assigned nurse/caregiver’s mobile device. The notification includes the call location and type of call allowing staff to respond to the call quickly and efficiently. 

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