Clinical Pathways and Nurses.
Clinical Pathways and Nurses.
Clinical Pathways and Nurses.
CARE.
1. Introduction
Clinical pathways are multidisciplinary plans (or a best possible plan of clinical care) for
specified groups of patients with a particular diagnosis. It’s a documented sequence of
clinical interventions that are coordinated to produce high quality care [7].
They serve as management, clinical and audit tools and are specific to the institution
using them. They not only begin with admission and end with discharge from the
hospital, but focus on the interdisciplinary effort required (e.g. they merge medical and
nursing plans with those of say physical therapy, nutrition, or mental health) to benefit a
patient. This improves collaborative practice and team approaches and maximizes
availability of expertise from multiple disciplines.
Identifying and clarifying clinical methods and processes ensure continuity of patient
care and reduce unnecessary variations. Collaboration between disciplines, professions
and agencies also increase. This ensures continuity of patient care by reducing
unnecessary variations in the management of the patient.
Resulting effectiveness supports subsequent clinical audit, risk management and
evidence based practice.
In a hospital setting, patients with similar illnesses having surgery might be handled
differently though the clinical outcomes are the same. Economic outcomes however will
defer because of say, length of hospital stay and patient conditions (i.e., co-morbidity).
A variation is changed patient care activities not previously outlined in the clinical
pathway. There are three distinct types of variation:
Systems variations - these include organizational failures such as the unavailability of
staff transport.
Health and social care professional variations - these include clinical judgments
Regarding the addition or deletion of specified interventions; and
Patient variations - these include unexpected illness or complications and patient
care. As active management tools they:
Figure 1: Physicians give medical care based upon tradition, their own training and
personal experience. This means patients with a common condition are treated
differently by different physicians resulting in differing outcomes. Quality improvement
here depends on Peer review and quality assurance.
Case management and Case Managers: There are three major elements to the
coordination role of the case manager:
1
1) Managerial responsibilities regarding the patient pathway during an episode of care.
The case becomes a catalyst to mobilize the team for common purpose through
meetings or phone calls and other forms of effective communications. Her role is to
oversee the evaluation and satisfaction of client needs as well as the achievement of
anticipated clinical outcomes from pre-hospitalization to post-hospitalization (along the
clinical pathway plan within the allotted time frame).
To do the above well, there need to increase professional visibility of nurses away from
the traditional image a provider who faithfully executes the doctor’s orders, which limits
the nurse to the conservative role of physical care, in medication delivery and in
patient monitoring.
Modern Nursing training encourages updating of their skills to become confident and
assume more prestigious duties. Changing societal values and increasing technology
demand that the organization of patient care delivery also changes. The role of the
nurse has now changed to be a case manager with qualities of leadership, coordination
and managerial competence.
Role of the Case Manager At the administrative level:
To coordinate the care delivered to a group of patients;
To facilitate communications between care providers and hierarchies;
To oversee the follow-up of consultations and that they are linked to other services;
To eliminate task duplications, plan for care delivery and implement the plans of care
and to ensure their follow-up.
Aspects of Case Management:
Requires a complete and integrated services network.
Takes the client in charge in his overall case without fragmenting care.
Is focused on the person and his family.
Is guided by specific objectives shared by all team members.
Is managed using structured, systematic and multidisciplinary clinical path way plans.