Date of Graduation
Summer 8-8-2024
Document Access
Project/Capstone - Global access
Degree Name
Master of Science in Nursing (MSN)
College/School
School of Nursing and Health Professions
Program
Kaiser cohort MSN capstone
First Advisor
Catherine Coleman, DNP, RN, PHN, CPHQ, CNL
Second Advisor
Carla Martin, DNP, RN, CIC, CNL, NEA-BC, FACHE
Abstract
Abstract
Problem: This quality improvement project aims to reduce the incidence of hospital-acquired delirium in an overflow unit, which serves a diverse patient population from medical-surgical and telemetry microsystems. The unit averages 96 delirium episodes annually, costing approximately $3,456,000. The goal is to reduce delirium incidence by 25%, decreasing monthly cases from 8 to 6 by October 31, 2024, and annual cases to 72 by April 2026.
Context: Delirium is a prevalent and severe neuropsychiatric syndrome that significantly affects older hospitalized patients, characterized by acute disturbances in attention, awareness, and cognition.
Interventions: The project introduced a bundle of four interventions over four months to prevent delirium in overflow units: staff education using the Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) tool; environmental modifications, such as placing clocks on bedside tables; patient engagement strategies, including increased daytime mobilization; proactive monitoring protocols, with monthly audits to assess delirium incidence.
Measures: Outcome measures included the incidence of delirium. Process measures included pre- and post-intervention staff surveys to assess baseline and comparative knowledge (n=30). Weekly delirium audits were conducted and analyzed over four months.
Results: Interim results indicate increased staff knowledge in identifying and preventing delirium (n=30), with a reduction in the incidence of delirium in 2 patients, resulting in savings of $72,000. RN surveys (n=117) post-implementation indicated 100% satisfaction.
Conclusions: The project demonstrated the necessity of nursing assessment and delirium prevention interventions. Clinical Nurse Leaders (CNLs) need to continuously advocate for evidence-based projects to prevent delirium and its high costs, particularly in heterogeneous units like overflow units.
Recommended Citation
Chong, Raquel G., "PROCESS IMPROVEMENT TO REDUCE THE INCIDENCE OF DELIRIUM IN AN OVERFLOW UNIT" (2024). Master's Projects and Capstones. 1782.
https://repository.usfca.edu/capstone/1782