The emergency department often is a patient’s first encounter with a hospital. This poses a unique opportunity for departments to get the patient’s experience off to the right start.
As leaders of these departments, we must never forget that small things do matter and that a patient’s experience is the sum of all their experiences and interactions. In this article, we are going to share two different strategies to understand the voice of your patients and employees that visit and work in your emergency department.
A great way to discover the positive or negative aspects of your emergency department patient experience is to actively round on patients and families while they are in the emergency room. Using the Nobl Rounding Platform, questions can be customized for each area (registration, triage, waiting room, treatment areas, diagnostic testing, or even the ambulance bays), and can be changed as often as needed.
At Nobl, we recognize the unique setting that emergency departments pose to the traditional leadership rounding model. In the emergency departments, leaders must assess when it’s appropriate to round, who to round on, and how to tailor the conversation to the patient and family.
Before rounding begins, consult the unit nurses to determine who would be a good candidate to receive a leader round. You can also check the unit status board. You will need to tailor the conversation with the patient depending on what stage they are at with their emergency department visit.
As you build your leader rounding on patient questions, consider questions that audit key nursing behaviors and processes, harvest wins and recognitions, and address patient concerns in real-time.
Below is an example nurse leader rounding form for rounding on emergency room patients.
Knowledge of delay |
Do you know what you are waiting on currently? |
Comfort |
Have you been asked how we can make you more comfortable? |
Staff Rounding Times |
How often have staff rounded on you during your visit? |
Listening and Responding |
Do you feel your care team (nurse and provider) are listening and responding to your needs? |
Comments or Concerns |
Do you have any comments or concerns? |
Recognition |
Is there is anyone I can recognize for providing excellent care today? |
Anything Else |
Is there anything else that I can do for you? I have the time. |
Environmental Assessment |
Environmental assessment: Is the call light in reach and bed rails up? |
We have all heard the saying “a picture is worth a thousand words” and ED patient experience begins with the first scene encountered when entering the door. Take a “walk” in your ED through the senses of the consumer.
Visit www.noblhealth.com to see how hospitals and clinics use the Nobl Rounding Platform to hardwire rounding and improve the patient experience.