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Team Functioning in a Health Care Setting

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Behavioral programs constructed by the NH's care plan team ... Performance-based lottery. Immediate rewards for strategy usage. Team Functioning ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Team Functioning in a Health Care Setting


1
Team Functioning in a Health Care Setting
  • Alan B. Stevens, PhD
  • Director, Dementia Care Research Program
  • Associate Professor
  • Division of Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine
  • University of Alabama at Birmingham

2
Health Care Teams
  • Response to specialization and technological
    complexity in health care
  • Prevalent in the management of chronic conditions
    (e.g., diabetes, congestive heart failure,
    depression)
  • Little is known about the organizational
    structure and the process of teamwork, and the
    resulting impact of teamwork on clinical outcomes

3
The Challenge of Effectiveness
  • Intensive Care Units
  • Emergency Departments
  • VA Surgical Services
  • Geriatric Assessment Units.

4
Team Characteristics and Patient Outcomes on VA
Rehabilitation Services (E-953 / E-1101)Team
Functioning and Patient Outcomes an RCT in
Process Improvement (E2367R)
  • Dale C. Strasser, M.D. Principal Investigator
  • Susan E. Bowen, Ph.D. Project Manager
  • Judith Falconer, Ph.D, MPH, OT/R Investigator
  • Jeph Herrin, Ph.D. Investigator
  • Rebekah N. Johns, OTR/L, MS Research Associate
  • Alan Stevens, Ph..D Investigator
  • Stan Smitts, Ph.D Consultant
  • Jay Uomoto, Ph.D Investigator

5
Model of Treatment Effectiveness inInpatient
Stroke Rehabilitation (Strasser 1997)
6
A Model of Team Functioning
  • Relations
  • Social Climate
  • Interprofessional
  • Actions
  • Leadership
  • Managerial Practices

7
Team Relations Social Climate and
Interprofessional Relations
  • Person
  • Assumed Role
  • Interpersonal
  • Social Climate
  • Profession
  • Codified Role
  • Interprofessional
  • Rehab Business

8
Team ActionsLeadership and Managerial Practices
  • Team
  • Procedures
  • Communicate
  • Coordinate
  • Problem-solve
  • Managerial Leadership
  • Expert
  • Trust
  • Motivate
  • Prioritize
  • Unify
  • Practices

9
Staff Surveys and Patient Outcome Data from a
National VA Data Base
  • Demographics and Measures of
  • Organizational Culture (Hospital Influences)
  • Physician Leadership (Actions)
  • Managerial Practices (Actions)
  • Social Climate (Relations)
  • Interprofessional Relations (Relations)
  • Patient Outcomes
  • FIM Motor Scores
  • Length of Stay
  • Discharge Destination

10
Summary of Participants
  • 46 teams representing 46 inpatient rehab units
  • 766 team members representing 6 core disciplines
  • 1627 stroke patients

11
Summary of Findings
  • Three measures of team functioning were
    significantly associated with patient functional
    improvement
  • task orientation (P 0.031)
  • order and organization (P 0.021)
  • utility of quality information (P 0.004)
  • One measure of team functioning, teamness, was
    significantly associated with LOS ( P 0.022).
  • Neither of two measures of hospital influences
    were associated with patient functional
    improvement or LOS.
  • None of the team variables predicted discharge
    destination.

12
Conclusions
  • Multiple characteristics of team functioning
    appear to be related to patient outcomes.
  • Efforts directed toward improving
    multidisciplinary activities and relationships,
    including collaborative planning and problem
    solving, and the use of feedback information, may
    enhance service delivery and patient outcomes.

13
Team Functioning in the Nursing Home
  • Nursing homes and inpatient rehabilitation have
    common treatment delivery and patient
    characteristics (e.g., treatment plans and goals
    for cognitively impaired patients).
  • Multiple levels of nursing staff develop and
    implement plans of care for residents.
  • Motivational systems for nursing staff have
    proven effectiveness.

14
A Behavioral Supervision Motivational System for
Nursing Homes
  • Clear definition of goals and tasks
  • Self- and supervisory monitoring
  • NA self-monitoring forms
  • LPN supervisor monitoring forms
  • Verbal and written performance feedback
  • Immediate verbal feedback to individual NAs
  • Weekly graphed feedback to individuals, unit
    groups, and administrative supervisors
  • Written monthly feedback in personnel files
  • Contingencies for CNA performance

15
General Observations from Nursing Home Studies
  • Generally, formal staff motivational systems
    produced superior performance than conventional
    nursing home supervision models.
  • Direct observation of CNA performance suggests a
    marked therapeutic change in communication skills
    and a decreased use of ineffective strategies.
  • Interventions have been associated with a
    significant decrease in agitation immediately
    post training and improvement in positive
    resident behaviors such as social interaction and
    active engagement in activities.

16
Challenges to Psychosocial Nursing Home Research
  • Measurement of Treatment Implementation (e.g.,
    behavioral strategy use)
  • Conceptualization and measurement of resident
    outcomes (e.g., agitation)
  • Feasibility of training protocol and staff
    motivational system in the current nursing home
    environment is questionable
  • Reimbursement rates
  • Staff-to-resident ratios
  • Staff turnover

17
Behavioral and Team Functioning to Meet Resident
NeedsA. Stevens and L. BurgioFunded by the
National Institute of Nursing Research
  • Conceptualize resident problem behaviors more
    broadly
  • Reduce staff training demands
  • Individualized behavioral treatments
  • Behavioral programs constructed by the NHs care
    plan team
  • Support provided from a behavioral consultant
  • Streamlined Behavioral Supervision techniques
  • More contextually rich staff motivation system
  • Supervisory skills training
  • Team functioning skills training for all levels
    of the nursing staff

18
Need-driven Dementia-compromised Behavior (NDB)
  • Individuals with dementia have a unique set of
    needs that must be met by other people and the
    surroundings (environment) of the person with
    dementia.
  • Each person has unique needs because of their
    background and their current situation.
  • Problem behaviors develop when the individuals
    needs are not met.
  • Identifying and meeting needs can be challenging
    for any caregiver.

19
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20
The W.A.I.T. ProjectWorking As Informed Teams
  • Aim 1
  • To evaluate the relative effects of the BPTF
    intervention as compared to minimal treatment
    control practices on CNA performance of specific
    behavioral strategies
  • Aim 2
  • To compare changes in NDBs (problematic
    behaviors) identified in residents
    individualized behavioral programs as well as
    changes in the residents overall level of
    problematic behavior across the two conditions.
  • Aim 3
  • To examine the effects of BPTF on the work milieu
    of the NH using standardized measures (Work
    Environment Scale, Perceived Effectiveness Scale)

21
Eight Strategies for Managing Problem Behaviors
  • Approach SkillsGetting off to a good start
  • Physical Needs Making residents comfortable
  • Adjust Stimulation Making a room pleasant
  • Distraction Giving residents something else to
    do
  • Single Steps Giving simple instructions
  • Independent Behavior Getting residents involved
  • Validation Responding to residents feelings
  • Reinforcement Letting residents know they did
    well

22
Resident Behaviors
23
Resident Behaviors
  • Target Behavior (duration)
  • The behavior identified by the staff as most
    problematic for this resident.

24
Behavioral Observations of Staff and Resident
Behaviors
  • Observation system that allows event and duration
    coding using hand held computer (PDAs)
  • Care routines are observed
  • Time sampling during most problematic time for
    the resident (2 hour block)

25
Behavioral Programming
  • Behavioral programs to meet resident needs
  • Training for Care Plan Team
  • Web-based training and resource materials
  • Inservice and hands-on training for nursing staff
    (Eight strategies)
  • External cues to prompt strategy use
  • Support from Behavioral Consultant

26
Behavioral Supervision
  • Supervisory and Self-monitor
  • CNA and LPN bi-monthly performance evaluations
    and feedback from supervisors
  • Incentives
  • Performance-based lottery
  • Immediate rewards for strategy usage

27
Team Functioning
  • Interactive training in core team work skills
  • Leadership
  • Communication
  • Coordination
  • Group problem solving
  • Agenda-driven, structured unit meetings
  • Team building activities (key rings, causal day,
    etc.)
  • Organizational consultant

28
Status of the Project
  • Pilot conducted at a single nursing home
  • Intervention Phase at first experimental
    condition nursing home
  • Baseline Phase at first comparison condition
    nursing home, which includes aspects of
    behavioral programming
  • Six additional nursing homes will be enrolled
    over the next three years
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