aonl web banner executive dialogue

Decreasing Hospital-Acquired Conditions

Tools and Tactics for success

[Sponsored] Nursing leaders prevented hospital-acquired conditions (HACs) during the recent pandemic patient surges with a combination of teamwork, data-driven technologies and enhanced safety protocols. This executive dialogue convened nurse executives to share their insights on developing a strong safety culture that will outlast the pandemic. Leaders also discussed the best ways to win staff buy-in for the new quality initiatives, a must for successful adoption.

Decreasing Hospital-Acquired Conditions

This executive dialogue will highlight key findings on:

  • Hospital-acquired condition prevention should not fall solely on nurses. During COVID surges, an all-hands-on-deck approach improved outcomes, a teamwork mentality leaders want to keep.
  • Most nurse leaders worry about patient falls and pressure injuries.
  • Regular safety meetings, checklists and improved accountability measures help reduce HACs.
  • Virtual sitters, chair alarms, toilet alarms and automated patient monitoring systems also help to diminish harm. Leaders also found value in artificial intelligence software, used to identify high-risk patients.
  • Hidden biases can affect treatment. For example, some clinicians may turn obese patients less than they do others. Data can help reveal these biases.
  • Organizations can improve safety culture with a consistent change management process led by C-suite leaders.

Download Executive Dialogue
Decreasing Hospital-Acquired Conditions

 

 

Sponsored by

Smith+Nephew

Related Resources

Today in Nursing Leadership Podcast
This podcast explores how nurse leaders can foster a healthy nursing workplace environment where leaders can grow and thrive: Be well, be safe and…
Today in Nursing Leadership Podcast
Frontline Nurse managers have become the “shock absorbers’ for their staff during the pandemic. To give them better tools and support their work,…
Headline
The American Hospital Association invites organizations to apply for the 2024 Foster G. McGaw Prize for Excellence in Community Service.
Today in Nursing Leadership Podcast
A discussion of the process to find the right nurse applicants and how to expedite. This conversation looks at the issue from three phases: how to…
New graduate nurses’ needs differ from those of experienced nurses, and in this white paper discover ways health systems can support nurses through…