Assign to Occupy
CONGESTION ISSUES AND SOLUTIONS
Prolonged or increased waiting time for patients at the Emergency Department lead to an increase in both morbidity and mortality among critically ill adult patients admitted for inpatient beds. The gathering of ED records of the St. Margaret Mary Healthcare Centers of Dyer, Indiana, aimed at developing a report on overcrowding, identified the main causes as the lack of available inpatient beds and the lack of nurses to care for patients. Long-term solutions are identified and suggested.
Theoretical Framework
Background/Significance -- Overcrowding at the ED occurs primarily because of overwhelmed ED manpower and sheer physical incapability because of the massive number of patients requiring or receiving care. Overcrowding, lack of ED staff and the delay of transfer to assigned bed, the lack of physical beds and un-timely discharges lead to increased boarding times at the ED.
Problem Statement -- Patients with assigned medical/surgical beds from the Emergency Department take too long to move from the Emergency Department to their inpatient beds. Prolonged boarding times at the ED increases morbidity and mortality risks among critically ill patients.
Objectives -- to decrease the time spent from the assignment of inpatient beds until they are occupied to within 30 minutes for 60% of the patients
Theoretical Framework -- The Orlando Nursing Process Theory lists the basic concepts for nurses in meeting patients' immediate needs. Overcrowding and delays in transfer complicate her task of assessing critical patients and filling their basic and immediate needs. The Theory will help her streamline her task to immediate needs until patients are moved to their destination.
Literature Review
Institutions report that 50% or more of hospitals go through the ED, considered the "front door (Harrell, 2012)." But patient flow through the ED is characterized by bottlenecks, confusing messages and the mingling of self-arriving patients and those brought in by emergency vehicles. Poorly conceived first encounter systems, queuing and poorly designed treatment areas lead to delays in treatment or management of patient record, increasing stress among patients and hospital staff alike. Poor and inefficient patient throughput leads to costly and mistake-laden operations and, ultimately, patient dissatisfaction. When the...
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