Employee Engagement And Today’s Nurse

Engagement is pivotal from bedside to boardroom

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By Kelly Hancock, DNP, RN, NE-BC

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For the past decade, Cleveland Clinic health system has been placing great emphasis on consistently improving employee engagement to create an environment that all employees can appreciate and enjoy while enhancing patient care.

Many other healthcare organizations have done the same, with the many changes our industry has undergone in the past 15 driving the need for improved and ongoing engagement. And recently, with the introduction of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), we have seen the most unprecedented changes to date, and many organizations have been presented with new challenges in attaining and sustaining engaged workforces.

In nursing, for example, frontline nurses have more responsibilities than they ever have, leading to workloads that can be overwhelming. If not addressed, engagement is certain to lower, which can negatively impact both organizational success and patient care. For healthcare organizations to successfully attain ACA requirements, like improving HCAHPS scores and patient safety or lowering readmissions, nurse engagement has to remain a top priority.

Maintaining nurse engagement for today’s bedside nurse

Since the dawn of our profession, nurses have been the most consistent face for a patient and his or her family. Research has found that the more time nurses spend at the bedside, the less likely patients are to experience falls, infections and medication errors – and, the more likely they are to be satisfied with their care.

However, today, within every hour of every shift, nurses are faced with a growing list of routine tasks, charting, locating supplies, administering medications and more. The job itself is becoming more stressful, and when nurses are stressed, they, their caregiver teams and their patients suffer.

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At Cleveland Clinic, we’ve been working diligently to implement systemwide best practices that each bedside nursing unit can adopt. As a result, the following are a selection of some of the more straightforward solutions our organization has found to positively impact bedside nurse engagement and satisfaction.

  • Redesign workspaces to enhance efficiency and reduce waste.
    • For example, store commonly used supplies within patient rooms.
  • Assess and eliminate inefficient processes – no matter how small – and focus on continuous improvement.
    • For example, implement technologies like barcode medication scanning to eliminate the need for dual-nurse sign-off and prevent administration of improperly stored or expired medications.
  • Increase nurse/patient interactions by conducting hourly rounding and charting electronic medical records together with patients and family members.
    • For example, use workstations on wheels (WOWs) or mobile tablets, or place computers in patient rooms.
  • Shift routine tasks to certified nurse assistants, like patient care nursing assistants (PCNAs) or clinical technicians.
    • For example, PCNAs can document care given, take vital signs, tend to dressings and wounds, and assist with personal hygiene and bathing needs.

With simple initiatives such as these, bedside nurses are not only able to spend more time caring for patients and educating them and their families on follow-up care, they also have a higher chance of remaining engaged in their work and within their organizations.

Nurse engagement is key to adapting to change, but also driving it

In an effort to maintain high nurse and caregiver engagement, Cleveland Clinic works with Press Ganey to cultivate a patient-centered culture. Our definition of engagement is centered on personal, emotional commitment to each other and the organization, including Cleveland Clinic’s mission, vision and goals.

We feel those caregivers who truly care about both the organization and their work have a willingness to take action and do what is needed of them, whatever it takes. With the close of the 2015 calendar year behind us, our health system’s leaders recently received the results of Press Ganey’s 2015 Cleveland Clinic employee engagement survey.

Our Nursing Institute Council, which comprises associate chief nursing officers, chief nursing officers and other key nurse executive staff, has been thoroughly reviewing the nurse engagement information – as are our hundreds of individual Nursing Institute teams. Renewed action planning per needs and is on the horizon and will continually be assessed and re-visited throughout 2016.

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Within our nursing organization, we conduct unit, hospital and institute-based engagement action planning. For example, from the institute level, our last survey results indicated that our nursing organization needed to focus action planning on four key areas: staffing, pay, stress and communication.

In 2015, we launched an engagement campaign called “We Heard You” in which we asked our nursing caregivers to speak up and give our leadership team their opinions on areas they felt our institute performed well and those needing improvement. Caregiver teams then developed customized action plans designed to drive change within the four key engagement areas.

As a nurse leader, it’s imperative to have a focused understanding of how to adapt to change, but also where to drive change. If an organization is to achieve sustainable improvements in the safety, cost and quality of care, nurse leaders must build high-performance nursing teams, attract and retain top talent, align nursing caregivers with patient experience goals and business strategies, and ensure that nurses are engaged – from bedside to boardroom.

Kelly Hancock is the Executive Chief Nursing Officer of the Cleveland Clinic Health System, and Chief Nursing Officer of Cleveland Clinic Main Campus.

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