Evaluating a major innovation in hospital design: workforce implications and impact on patient and staff experiences of all single room hospital accommodation
- PMID: 25719188
- Bookshelf ID: NBK274434
- DOI: 10.3310/hsdr03030
Evaluating a major innovation in hospital design: workforce implications and impact on patient and staff experiences of all single room hospital accommodation
Excerpt
Background: New hospital design includes more single room accommodation but there is scant and ambiguous evidence relating to the impact on patient safety and staff and patient experiences.
Objectives: To explore the impact of the move to a newly built acute hospital with all single rooms on care delivery, working practices, staff and patient experience, safety outcomes and costs.
Design: (1) Mixed-methods study to inform a pre-/post-‘move’ comparison within a single hospital, (2) quasi-experimental study in two control hospitals and (3) analysis of capital and operational costs associated with single rooms.
Setting: Four nested case study wards [postnatal, acute admissions unit (AAU), general surgery and older people’s] within a new hospital with all single rooms. Matched wards in two control hospitals formed the comparator group.
Data sources: Twenty-one stakeholder interviews; 250 hours of observation, 24 staff interviews, 32 patient interviews, staff survey (n = 55) and staff pedometer data (n = 56) in the four case study wards; routinely collected data at ward level in the control hospitals (e.g. infection rates) and costs associated with hospital design (e.g. cleaning and staffing) in the new hospital.
Results: (1) There was no significant change to the proportion of time spent by nursing staff on different activities. Staff perceived improvements (patient comfort and confidentiality), but thought the new accommodation worse for visibility and surveillance, teamwork, monitoring, safeguarding and remaining close to patients. Giving sufficient time and attention to each patient, locating other staff and discussing care with colleagues proved difficult. Two-thirds of patients expressed a clear preference for single rooms, with the benefits of comfort and control outweighing any disadvantages. Some patients experienced care as task-driven and functional, and interaction with other patients was absent, leading to a sense of isolation. Staff walking distances increased significantly after the move. (2) A temporary increase in falls and medication errors within the AAU was likely to be associated with the need to adjust work patterns rather than associated with single rooms, although staff perceived the loss of panoptic surveillance as the key to increases in falls. Because of the fall in infection rates nationally and the low incidence at our study site and comparator hospitals, it is difficult to conclude from our data that it is the ‘single room’ factor that prevents infection. (3) Building an all single room hospital can cost 5% more but the difference is marginal over time. Housekeeping and cleaning costs are higher.
Conclusions: The nature of tasks undertaken by nurses did not change, but staff needed to adapt their working practices significantly and felt ill prepared for the new ways of working, with potentially significant implications for the nature of teamwork in the longer term. Staff preference remained for a mix of single rooms and bays. Patients preferred single rooms. There was no strong evidence that single rooms had any impact on patient safety but housekeeping and cleaning costs are higher. In terms of future work, patient experience and preferences in hospitals with different proportions of single rooms/designs need to be explored with a larger patient sample. The long-term impact of single room working on the nature of teamwork and informal learning and on clinical/care outcomes should also be explored.
Funding: The National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.
Copyright © Queen’s Printer and Controller of HMSO 2015. This work was produced by Maben et al. under the terms of a commissioning contract issued by the Secretary of State for Health. This issue may be freely reproduced for the purposes of private research and study and extracts (or indeed, the full report) may be included in professional journals provided that suitable acknowledgement is made and the reproduction is not associated with any form of advertising. Applications for commercial reproduction should be addressed to: NIHR Journals Library, National Institute for Health Research, Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre, Alpha House, University of Southampton Science Park, Southampton SO16 7NS, UK.
Sections
- Plain English summary
- Scientific summary
- Chapter 1. Introduction and background
- Chapter 2. Methods
- Chapter 3. Developing the single room hospital and organisational support for single room working
- Chapter 4. The case study wards
- Chapter 5. Case study quantitative data findings
- Chapter 6. Staff experiences of the advantages and challenges of single rooms: adaptations to work patterns
- Chapter 7. Patient experience of the single room ward environment
- Chapter 8. Single rooms and patient safety: before-and-after study with non-equivalent controls
- Chapter 9. Cost impact of a single room hospital design
- Chapter 10. Conclusions: were the expected benefits of and concerns about the 100% single room design realised?
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix 1 Health economics literature review
- Appendix 2 Patient and public involvement in the study
- Appendix 3 Phase 1 key findings
- Appendix 4 Staff and patient project information sheets
- Appendix 5 Pre-move stakeholder interview sample and interview guide
- Appendix 6 Stakeholder interview guide
- Appendix 7 List of personal digital assistant categories and definitions
- Appendix 8 Staff survey (medical assessment unit version)
- Appendix 9 Changes made to staff survey in new hospital
- Appendix 10 Staff interview topic guide
- Appendix 11 Reflexive photography information
- Appendix 12 Patient interview topic guide
- Appendix 13 Pre-move patient interview sample
- Appendix 14 Example of interview framework analysis
- Appendix 15 Expert interview schedules for construction costs and ward services data collection
- Appendix 16 Business case
- Appendix 17 Pre-move case study ward layouts
- Appendix 18 Ward diagrams in Tunbridge Wells Hospital
- Appendix 19 Ward environment subscale items
- Appendix 20 Teamwork and safety climate items
- Appendix 21 Additional case-mix data for Tunbridge Wells
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Appendix 22 Definition of fall risk by
International Classification of Diseases codes - Appendix 23 Cross-case analysis of the four case study wards
- Glossary
- List of abbreviations
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