Abstract
Background Team communication is essential to delivering health care safely. Nurses in the adult intensive care unit at a large military treatment facility were not consistently present in daily patient rounds and stated that team communication could be improved. This clinical question was developed: among critical care staff members, how does a standardized daily rounding script, compared with current practice, impact interdisciplinary communication over a 36-week period? Review of Evidence Current literature includes 3 themes: rounds should be interdisciplinary; include the ABCDEF bundle (pain assessment, spontaneous awakening and breathing trials, analgesia and sedation choice, delirium assessment, early mobility, and family engagement); and use a standardized script. These elements can improve perceptions of collaboration in rounds. Implementation An interdisciplinary rounding script was introduced across 2 adult intensive care units at a military hospital over 36 weeks. Before and after the intervention, the Collaboration and Satisfaction About Care Decisions survey was used to assess nurses’ perceptions of collaboration; rounds were observed for key elements. Evaluation After implementation, the mean survey score (both units combined) rose by 1.5 units, nurse presence at rounds increased by 21.6% (P =.01), nurse contributions to rounds increased by 31.1% (P =.001), all bundle elements were reviewed 18.9% more often (P =.07), a summary of care was given 53.6% more often (P <.001), and order read back was completed 69.8% more often (P <.001). Sustainability Continued use of the script in the military treatment facility will require adapting it to practice changes and training new staff members on its use.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 16-26 |
| Number of pages | 11 |
| Journal | Critical Care Nurse |
| Volume | 45 |
| Issue number | 5 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Oct 2025 |