Thursday, July 12, 2018

Project Update - Jacaranda Maternity

Andrea Arathoon – University of Michigan School of Public Health

Tuesday was a very exciting day because I reached a milestone in my summer project! After 8 weeks of work, we started testing the new outpatient care checklists for prenatal visits.

During the past few weeks we’ve been working on developing this checklist to improve patient flow within the outpatient clinic. Currently, waiting times can be longer than expected due to certain inefficiencies in patient flow,  and we anticipate that the new care checklists will address these issues. We are also making sure that Jacaranda Maternity follows WHO and Kenyan Ministry of Health guidelines on prenatal care. After designing the new outpatient checklist, we consulted with physicians, nurses, patient care assistants and the administrative staff to ensure that the document was complete and easy to understand, and that it served its purpose of being a decision-support tool for clinicians during the prenatal visits.

Two weeks ago, we made the last changes to our prototype checklist and trained nurses, patient care assistants, and receptionists on this new tool. What I hadn’t considered was the fact that printing of the checklist would take time, because the process is a bit slower than I expected. This delayed the project by over a week. We finally received the printed files on Monday afternoon, and we started the testing period Tuesday morning.

At the same time that we rolled out this prototype checklist, we also implemented a new document called “Patient Reminders”. This idea came up after my week of observing the outpatient flow. When patients come for their prenatal visits, they bring a “Maternity Card” which is a booklet that contains all the relevant information about the patient’s pregnancy in case she needs to visit another health facility during pregnancy or for delivery. Patients understand the importance of this Card, and make sure to always have it with them when they seek care.

Picture of the outpatient checklist and my
mid-morning snack - coffee and Kenyan chapati
This Card is also important because nurses write the tests that are needed to be done before the patient’s next visit. There is just one problem with this care model: no one is held accountable for ensuring that the patient gets the tests she needs before she sees the nurse. And if she doesn’t get a test done before seeing the clinician, she might have to wait much longer because she needs to go back to the laboratory or ultrasound, wait for results and then return to her outpatient consultation. Receptionists are supposed to check the Card when the patient checks-in, but for many different reasons this is not always done.

The “Patient Reminders” document is meant to solve that problem. The document is small (about ¼ of a letter-sized paper) and is designed as a checklist. Now, when nurses see a patient, they only have to check the boxes for the tests that are needed before the next visit, and when the patient checks-in next time, receptionists have a much easier way of identifying the tests that were prescribed on the previous visit.



The new outpatient checklist tool for prenatal visits and the patient reminders document will be tested for the next two weeks, and we will make any adjustments needed after this trial period so that we can implement the final outpatient checklist and reminders document in the coming weeks. This outpatient checklist is the first step in moving the patient’s file to the EMR that was implemented approximately one month ago. The idea is to utilize this paper checklist while the hospital begins the process of redesigning the clinical portion of the EMR. Once the checklist has been incorporated into the EMR, clinicians will be able to take full advantage of the benefits of utilizing the system as a decision-support tool that aids them in their decision-making process.

No comments:

Post a Comment