Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11434/1484
Title: The Fundamentals of Care program: enhancing patient experience, clinical service and safety.
Epworth Authors: Steen, Kate
Keywords: Fundamental of Care Program
FoC Program
Patient Feedbacks
Care Issues
Patient Experience
Communication with Patients
Patient Safety
Personal Care Needs
Communication Tools
Empathy
Patient Satisfaction
Staff FoC Engagement
Centre for Quality and Patient Safety Research, Epworth HealthCare Partnership
Issue Date: Jun-2018
Conference Name: Epworth HealthCare Research Week 2018
Conference Location: Epworth Research Institute, Victoria, Australia
Abstract: Background The impetus for the development of the Fundamentals of Care (FoC) program at Epworth Richmond came from: 1) detailed analysis of patient incidents and feedback comments, many of which related to “basic” care issues, and 2) the desire to optimise the patient experience in accordance with Epworth values of respect, excellence, community, compassion, integrity and accountability. The FoC program aims to influence patient experience through the four pillars of: 1) communicating with our patients; 2) involving our patients in their care; 3) Meeting our patients’ personal care needs; and 4) keeping our patients safe. The purpose of this presentation is to describe the process of engaging staff from clinical and non clinical departments in the development of the FoC program. Method The development of the Richmond FoC Program was led by the Epworth Richmond Director of Clinical Services and the FoC Working Party. The detailed planning process began in 2016, and the development, implementation and evaluation occurred throughout 2017 through four key forums addressing: 1) the four pillars of the FoC; 2) accountability, reward and recognition; 3) connected care (including use of existing communication tools and processes such as rounding and AIDET); and 4) empathy. Results and Discussion Early outcomes indicate improvements in patient experience seen in the positive change in the patient ‘compliments to complaints’ ratio and patient satisfaction survey responses. Staff engagement in FoC is evident in feedback and staff experience surveys. Ongoing evaluation of outcomes and sustainability of the FoC program is needed but initial outcomes are positive. Ethics approval: This was an internal quality improvement project sponsored by the Epworth Richmond executive.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11434/1484
Type: Conference Poster
Appears in Collections:Health Administration
Research Month

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