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Can district nurses and care home staff improve bowel cancer for older people using a clinical benchmarking tool?

Can district nurses and care home staff improve bowel cancer for older people using a clinical benchmarking tool?
Can district nurses and care home staff improve bowel cancer for older people using a clinical benchmarking tool?
A quasi-experimental study tested a clinical benchmarking tool (Essence of Care) to improve bowel-related care for older people living in six care homes. In the intervention care homes, district nurses and care home staff used the clinical benchmarking tool to discuss and plan how to improve bowel care for residents. In the control care homes, staff were provided with detailed information about the residents and continence services contact details. The intervention was acceptable to care home and district nursing staff, and possible to incorporate into existing working patterns. The study did not demonstrate a significant reduction in bowel-related problems, although there was evidence in one care home of reduction in episodes of avoidable faecal incontinence. At an individual level of care, there were observable benefits, and examples of person-centred care were prompted through participating in the intervention and improved staff awareness. Clinical benchmarking tools can be used to structure discussion between district nurses and care home staff to review and plan care for residents. However, it takes time to achieve change and embedding this kind of approach requires either robust pre-existing working relationships or the involvement of a facilitator.
clinical benchmarking, incontinence, bowel care, district nursing, care homes
1462-4753
580-587
Goodman, C.
875b3bce-5e63-498d-83d3-a2e272657ad3
Davies, S.
5b030b81-3805-489a-bb2a-96d9dff61b07
Norton, C.
8e9c64e3-328c-482c-9289-3233e1d134a9
Fader, M.
c318f942-2ddb-462a-9183-8b678faf7277
Morris, J.
3a7cede4-9dc3-4ec5-b482-ca84b8935afe
Wells, M.
e36f98e6-36ef-4fec-8fd5-9402faf02d6c
Gage, H.
6ab13ea1-cd2c-4028-890e-778c140c35ae
Goodman, C.
875b3bce-5e63-498d-83d3-a2e272657ad3
Davies, S.
5b030b81-3805-489a-bb2a-96d9dff61b07
Norton, C.
8e9c64e3-328c-482c-9289-3233e1d134a9
Fader, M.
c318f942-2ddb-462a-9183-8b678faf7277
Morris, J.
3a7cede4-9dc3-4ec5-b482-ca84b8935afe
Wells, M.
e36f98e6-36ef-4fec-8fd5-9402faf02d6c
Gage, H.
6ab13ea1-cd2c-4028-890e-778c140c35ae

Goodman, C., Davies, S., Norton, C., Fader, M., Morris, J., Wells, M. and Gage, H. (2013) Can district nurses and care home staff improve bowel cancer for older people using a clinical benchmarking tool? British Journal of Community Nursing, 18 (12), 580-587. (doi:10.12968/bjcn.2013.18.12.580). (PMID:24335790)

Record type: Article

Abstract

A quasi-experimental study tested a clinical benchmarking tool (Essence of Care) to improve bowel-related care for older people living in six care homes. In the intervention care homes, district nurses and care home staff used the clinical benchmarking tool to discuss and plan how to improve bowel care for residents. In the control care homes, staff were provided with detailed information about the residents and continence services contact details. The intervention was acceptable to care home and district nursing staff, and possible to incorporate into existing working patterns. The study did not demonstrate a significant reduction in bowel-related problems, although there was evidence in one care home of reduction in episodes of avoidable faecal incontinence. At an individual level of care, there were observable benefits, and examples of person-centred care were prompted through participating in the intervention and improved staff awareness. Clinical benchmarking tools can be used to structure discussion between district nurses and care home staff to review and plan care for residents. However, it takes time to achieve change and embedding this kind of approach requires either robust pre-existing working relationships or the involvement of a facilitator.

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More information

Published date: December 2013
Keywords: clinical benchmarking, incontinence, bowel care, district nursing, care homes
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

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Local EPrints ID: 385765
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/385765
ISSN: 1462-4753
PURE UUID: 1dcc225d-1ec2-45fa-aff7-8ee42791f38a

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Date deposited: 22 Jan 2016 10:15
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 22:22

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Contributors

Author: C. Goodman
Author: S. Davies
Author: C. Norton
Author: M. Fader
Author: J. Morris
Author: M. Wells
Author: H. Gage

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