Impact of a blended curriculum on nursing handover quality: a quality improvement project

Context and objective The negative consequences of inadequate nursing handovers on patient safety are widely acknowledged, both within the literature as in practice. Evidence regarding strategies to improve nursing handover is, however, lacking. This study investigates the effect of a tailored, blen...

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Main Authors: Xavier Losfeld, Laure Istas, Quentin Schoonvaere, Michel Vergnion, Jochen Bergs
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2021-03-01
Series:BMJ Open Quality
Online Access:https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/10/1/e001024.full
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spelling doaj-044d7377e2fd4e98b27d03d1244cac5f2021-04-22T10:01:07ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open Quality2399-66412021-03-0110110.1136/bmjoq-2020-001024Impact of a blended curriculum on nursing handover quality: a quality improvement projectXavier Losfeld0Laure Istas1Quentin Schoonvaere2Michel Vergnion3Jochen Bergs4Level 1 Trauma Center, Emergency Department, CHR Citadelle, Liege, BelgiumPlatform for Continuous Improvement of Quality of Care and Patient Safety (PAQS ASBL), Brussels, BelgiumPlatform for Continuous Improvement of Quality of Care and Patient Safety (PAQS ASBL), Brussels, BelgiumEmergency Department, CHR Citadelle, Liege, BelgiumFaculty of Medicine and Life Sciences, Hasselt University, Hasselt, BelgiumContext and objective The negative consequences of inadequate nursing handovers on patient safety are widely acknowledged, both within the literature as in practice. Evidence regarding strategies to improve nursing handover is, however, lacking. This study investigates the effect of a tailored, blended curriculum on nurses’ perception of handover quality.Methods We used a pre-test/post-test design within four units of a Belgian general hospital. Our educational intervention consisted of an e-learning module on professional communication and a face-to-face session on the use of a structured method for handovers. All nurses completed this blended curriculum (n=87). We used the Handover Evaluation Scale (HES) to evaluate nurses’ perception of handover quality before and after the intervention. The HES was answered by 87.4% of the nurses (n=76 of 87) before and 50.6% (n=44 of 87) after the intervention. Confirmatory factor analysis was used to assess the validity of the HES.Results The original factor structure did not fit with our data. We identified a new HES structure with acceptable or good fit indices. The overall internal consistency of our HES structure was considered adequate. Perception of nurses on Relevance of information showed a significant improvement (M=53.19±4.33 vs M=61.03±6.01; p=0.04). Nurses also felt that the timely provision of patient information improved significantly (M=4.50±0.34 vs M=5.16±0.40; p=0.01).Conclusion The applied intervention resulted in an improved awareness on the importance of Relevance of information during handovers. After our intervention, the nurses’ perception of the HES item ‘Patient information is provided in a timely manner’ also improved significantly. We are aware that the educational intervention is only the first step to achieve the long-term implementation of a culture of professional communication based on mutual support.https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/10/1/e001024.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xavier Losfeld
Laure Istas
Quentin Schoonvaere
Michel Vergnion
Jochen Bergs
spellingShingle Xavier Losfeld
Laure Istas
Quentin Schoonvaere
Michel Vergnion
Jochen Bergs
Impact of a blended curriculum on nursing handover quality: a quality improvement project
BMJ Open Quality
author_facet Xavier Losfeld
Laure Istas
Quentin Schoonvaere
Michel Vergnion
Jochen Bergs
author_sort Xavier Losfeld
title Impact of a blended curriculum on nursing handover quality: a quality improvement project
title_short Impact of a blended curriculum on nursing handover quality: a quality improvement project
title_full Impact of a blended curriculum on nursing handover quality: a quality improvement project
title_fullStr Impact of a blended curriculum on nursing handover quality: a quality improvement project
title_full_unstemmed Impact of a blended curriculum on nursing handover quality: a quality improvement project
title_sort impact of a blended curriculum on nursing handover quality: a quality improvement project
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series BMJ Open Quality
issn 2399-6641
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Context and objective The negative consequences of inadequate nursing handovers on patient safety are widely acknowledged, both within the literature as in practice. Evidence regarding strategies to improve nursing handover is, however, lacking. This study investigates the effect of a tailored, blended curriculum on nurses’ perception of handover quality.Methods We used a pre-test/post-test design within four units of a Belgian general hospital. Our educational intervention consisted of an e-learning module on professional communication and a face-to-face session on the use of a structured method for handovers. All nurses completed this blended curriculum (n=87). We used the Handover Evaluation Scale (HES) to evaluate nurses’ perception of handover quality before and after the intervention. The HES was answered by 87.4% of the nurses (n=76 of 87) before and 50.6% (n=44 of 87) after the intervention. Confirmatory factor analysis was used to assess the validity of the HES.Results The original factor structure did not fit with our data. We identified a new HES structure with acceptable or good fit indices. The overall internal consistency of our HES structure was considered adequate. Perception of nurses on Relevance of information showed a significant improvement (M=53.19±4.33 vs M=61.03±6.01; p=0.04). Nurses also felt that the timely provision of patient information improved significantly (M=4.50±0.34 vs M=5.16±0.40; p=0.01).Conclusion The applied intervention resulted in an improved awareness on the importance of Relevance of information during handovers. After our intervention, the nurses’ perception of the HES item ‘Patient information is provided in a timely manner’ also improved significantly. We are aware that the educational intervention is only the first step to achieve the long-term implementation of a culture of professional communication based on mutual support.
url https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/10/1/e001024.full
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