Follow the Blue Feet: Nurse Implemented Postoperative MOBILITY Program.

MedStar author(s):
Citation: Journal of Burn Care & Research. 39(1):54-59, 2017 Dec 27PMID: 29596678Institution: MedStar Health Research Institute | MedStar Washington Hospital CenterDepartment: Firefighters' Burn and Surgical Research Laboratory | Surgery/Burn ServicesForm of publication: Journal ArticleMedline article type(s): Journal ArticleSubject headings: *Burns/nu [Nursing] | *Early Ambulation | *Postoperative Care/nu [Nursing] | *Program Evaluation | Burn Units | Cues | Documentation | Humans | Maryland/ep [Epidemiology] | Patient Education as Topic | Patient Satisfaction | Quality ImprovementYear: 2017Local holdings: Available online through MWHC library: 2006 - present, Available in print through MWHC library: 2006 - presentISSN:
  • 1559-047X
Name of journal: Journal of burn care & research : official publication of the American Burn AssociationAbstract: To establish the effectiveness of a nurse-led postoperative MOBILITY program implemented on the Burn/Surgical/Trauma unit at our facility to increase documentation of patient mobility and to develop nurse and patient understanding of the importance of movement in postoperative recovery while increasing patient satisfaction with mobility. The MOBILITY program was implemented on a 24-bed Burn/Surgical/Trauma unit. Lewin's Change Theory guided the development of the program, while the Iowa Model of Evidence-Based Practice for Quality Care was the framework for the project. Nursing staff (n = 20) on the Burn/Trauma unit completed pre/postimplementation MOBILITY surveys. Pre/postimplementation MOBILITY patient (n = 9) satisfaction questionnaires were completed by postoperative patients. Retrospective chart (n = 10) audits were performed pre/postimplementation. Included in the chart audits and patient satisfaction surveys were patients 72 hours or less postoperatively without lower limb weight-bearing restrictions. Those excluded were patients on complete bed rest, or those with bilateral or unilateral nonweight-bearing orders. Documentation of mobility improved by 233.3%, while ambulation distance documentation increased by 700%. Mobility orders entered by the medical team rose by 66.7% postintervention. Nurses' comfort level with assessing mobility improved by 38.5%. Knowledge of where to document patient postoperative mobility improved by 80%. Postintervention patient satisfaction with postoperative mobility saw a 60% change. Patients performing postoperative mobility increased by 80%. Implementation of a nurse-led postoperative MOBILITY program on a Burn/Surgical/Trauma unit showed a marked increase in nurse and patient understanding of postoperative mobility, patient satisfaction with postoperative mobility, and nursing documentation of patient mobility.All authors: Curtin K, Lee K, McLawhorn MM, Shupp JW, Walters ESFiscal year: FY2018Digital Object Identifier: Date added to catalog: 2018-05-08
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Journal Article MedStar Authors Catalog Article 29596678 Available 29596678

Available online through MWHC library: 2006 - present, Available in print through MWHC library: 2006 - present

To establish the effectiveness of a nurse-led postoperative MOBILITY program implemented on the Burn/Surgical/Trauma unit at our facility to increase documentation of patient mobility and to develop nurse and patient understanding of the importance of movement in postoperative recovery while increasing patient satisfaction with mobility. The MOBILITY program was implemented on a 24-bed Burn/Surgical/Trauma unit. Lewin's Change Theory guided the development of the program, while the Iowa Model of Evidence-Based Practice for Quality Care was the framework for the project. Nursing staff (n = 20) on the Burn/Trauma unit completed pre/postimplementation MOBILITY surveys. Pre/postimplementation MOBILITY patient (n = 9) satisfaction questionnaires were completed by postoperative patients. Retrospective chart (n = 10) audits were performed pre/postimplementation. Included in the chart audits and patient satisfaction surveys were patients 72 hours or less postoperatively without lower limb weight-bearing restrictions. Those excluded were patients on complete bed rest, or those with bilateral or unilateral nonweight-bearing orders. Documentation of mobility improved by 233.3%, while ambulation distance documentation increased by 700%. Mobility orders entered by the medical team rose by 66.7% postintervention. Nurses' comfort level with assessing mobility improved by 38.5%. Knowledge of where to document patient postoperative mobility improved by 80%. Postintervention patient satisfaction with postoperative mobility saw a 60% change. Patients performing postoperative mobility increased by 80%. Implementation of a nurse-led postoperative MOBILITY program on a Burn/Surgical/Trauma unit showed a marked increase in nurse and patient understanding of postoperative mobility, patient satisfaction with postoperative mobility, and nursing documentation of patient mobility.

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