Patient Care Device
Upgrade of Patient Care Device
Advancements in medical care have always been in need since technological innovation can create wonders in improving health care facilities for the patients. Some of the advancements have helped the healthcare in expanding their reach out of the hospitals and integrating with user-friendly, handy devices. Technology is transforming the way humans live and behave. Better treatment with less suffering has been induced into the medical care and respective devices so that patients could have access to best possible medical facilities within the hospitals. Not only sophisticated practices in healthcare but also the advanced devices are proving valuable in providing more chances for the quick recovery of billions of patients all over the world. This paper focuses on the upgradation and replacement of an existing patient care device in our practice setting. In the following sections of the paper, the implementation and its effects on the stakeholders would be discussed in detail.
Description of Current Patient Care Device
The current patient care device used in our practice setting is an electronic thermometer. It is a sensor-based body temperature reading device that has the ability to change its electrical characteristic with the change in patient's body temperature. It has a red light that tells when the highest temperature is recorded on the device within a few seconds or minutes.
Needs Assessment and Rationale for Upgrading
The needs assessment and rationale for having an upgradation in the medical care device at the hospital is detailed as follows:
Technical Criteria
The desired levels of hardware and software performance for the upgrading of the medical care device are discussed along these lines:
Amount of downtime: The thermometer should be able to provide 24-hour system availability so that temperatures could be recorded whenever needed.
Connectivity standards: The thermometer should be able to connect whenever the device is powered on in least possible time.
Response time support of electronic technologies: The log-on should be short so that the device is switched on as soon as possible for the ease of accurate results.
Administrative and General Criteria
Data standards and data exchange: The device should be able to work in accordance with "standards" that are used in the industry.
Data storage options: The last reading of the temperature should be displayed when needed, hence, providing a small option of data storage.
(Registration criteria, order entry/CPOE/results reporting criteria, documentation and billing criteria, scheduling criteria, specialties criteria, medical records criteria and accounting criteria do not apply to the selected medical care device, i.e.: thermometer.)
Key Stakeholders and Roles in Decision Making
The key stakeholders that would be involved in the decision-making process of whether the upgradation of the medical care device is needed or not include the following:
External stakeholders
The external stakeholders include the suppliers, patients and the government. Their respective roles in the decision making for the replacement of the old device are explained as below:
Suppliers: The suppliers of the new infrared thermometers are the ones who would earn profit from the sales of the new thermometers. They certainly are in the favor of the use of infrared thermometers within the medical premises.
Patients: They are the topmost priority of the hospital when making a decision about any of the upgradations of a medical device. They would be benefitted the most once the new device is made functional.
Government: Although government benefits due to the increased medical facilities and improvements in the hospitals since the nation would be healthier and the economy would get a boost, but as thermometers are small-scale implement within a hospital premises, the government's role in its decision making is limited. Still, the government would get benefits if the hospital uses better medical devices.
Internal stakeholders
Nurses: Nurses would be able to record a patient's body temperature better without getting in physical contact with the patient. This would save them from a number of issues and would help to maintain a healthy patient-nurse relation within the premises. It is believed that there is always resistance to change but in relation to the use of infrared thermometers, there are no considerable barriers to its implementation ("Riverband City," n.d., p. 5).
Administration: The hospital administration favors the introduction of the new thermometer, being convenient. Its efficiency in recording the temperature would help to maintain a positive environment within the hospital, regarding patient-nurse issues.
Board of directors: The board of directors would be concerned about the use of new thermometer since they work towards health of the patients and that is facilitated with the use of an updated technological device in medical field. The quality improvements (QI) would ensure refinement in patient services and enhanced provision of health care within the medical facility (Cacchlone, 2011, p. 4).
Medical doctors: The medical doctors would be satisfied with the use of thermometers since it is...
Bed and Chair Alarm in to Help Reduce Falls in Short-Term Care Facility In long-term care facilities (e.g., assisted living centres and nursing homes), a fall is one of the single most devastating category of unpleasant events. In consequence, there is need for long-term care facilities to pay attention to issues of resident falls. To a significant extent, adequate fall prevention depends on the ability of caregivers to hold on to
Stated to be barriers in the current environment and responsible for the reporting that is inadequate in relation to medical errors are: Lack of a common understanding about errors among health care professionals Physicians generally think of errors as individual that resulted from patient morbidity or mortality. Physicians report errors in medical records that have in turn been ignored by researchers. Interestingly errors in medication occur in almost 1 of every 5 doses
66). Furthermore, social software will only increase in importance in helping organizations maintain and manage their domains of knowledge and information. When networks are enabled and flourish, their value to all users and to the organization increases as well. That increase in value is typically nonlinear, where some additions yield more than proportionate values to the organization (McCluskey and Korobow, 2009). Some of the key characteristics of social software applications
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now