ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE
Data Collection and Plan for Analysis
The proposed project seeks to implement a mandatory medication safety education for clinical staff at the selected site. The project seeks to address the high incidence of medication errors at the clinical site by improving participants knowledge and attitudes towards medication errors. The education program will begin with nurses, and will be rolled out to physicians and pharmacists if found to be effective. As part of assessing the success of the project, the project team will carry out a pre and post-intervention evaluation exercise that will involve comparing staff knowledge and attitudes about medication safety before and after the project. This text details the data collection and analysis techniques that the project team plans to use to evaluate the project.
Data Collection and Analysis Plan
The project evaluation will involve two phases. The first phase will assess how participants knowledge and attitudes towards medication errors and medication safety change as a result of the education program. The second phase will compare the incidence of medication errors in the year of project implementation against past years to determine whether there has been a notable change.
Data for the first phase of evaluation will be collected using a questionnaire that will be administered online via the Survey Monkey platform. The questionnaire includes knowledge-based, attitude-based, and practice-related questions (Meher et al., 2015). The ten knowledge-based questions assess general knowledge about medication errors and medication safety practices, including what is a medication error, causes of medication errors, who can report medication errors, and the rights of medication administration. The seven attitude-based questions assess attitudes towards medication errors, including what one thinks about reporting errors, whether one believes reporting is beneficial, and what role nurses could play in reporting. Finally, the four practice questions assess what participants have encountered in their practice, such as whether they have seen or witnessed a medication error and whether they have played a role in reporting errors. The questionnaire was adopted from the study by Meher et al. (2015), which sought to assess knowledge, practice, and attitudes towards pharmacovigilance among undergraduate medical students...
…project team identified key performance indicators for each of the four BSC perspectives as follows (Victor & Farooq, 2021):Financial: 20% increase in sales revenues from increased customer visits
Customer perspective: 25% increase in the patient satisfaction index
Learning and growth: increased Staff knowledge on medication safety, improved attitudes towards medication errors
Internal processes: 50% reduction in the incidence of medication errors per 100 patients
Based on the four KPIs, the project team settled on a staff education program on medication safety as the most plausible strategy. Consequently, these KPIs were communicated to all clinical staff to inform their individual and departmental targets in the year of project implementation. Every employee understands how their role contributes to the attainment of one or more of the following KPIs and each one is required to evaluate their individual performance based on the same KPIs. The change champions periodically meet their team members to track their progress in regard to the set KPIs and to offer supports and mentorship in tasks where team members may be experiencing difficulties that could hinder the attainment…
References
Mailat, D., Stoica, D.-A., Surgun, M. B., Traistaru, N. I., & Vranceanu, A. (2019). Balancedscorecard vs. dashboard: Implications and managerial priorities. Academic Journal of Economic Studies, 5(1), 170.
Meher, B. R., Joshua, N., Asha, B., & Mukherji, D. (2015). A questionnaire-based study to assess knowledge, attitude, and practice of pharmacovigilance among underagraduate medical students in a tertiary care teaching hospital in South India. Perspectives in Clinical Research, 6(4), 217-221.
Safholm, S., Bondesson, A., & Modig, S. (2019). Medication errors in primary healthcare records: A cross-sectional study in southern Sweden. BMC Primary Care, 20(1), 110.
Victor, S., & Farooq, A. (2021). Dashboard visualisation for healthcare performancemanagement: Balanced scorecard method. Asia Pacific Journal of Health Management, 16(2). Doi. https://doi.org/10.24083/apjhm.v16i2.625
White, K. M., Dudley-Brown, S., & Terhaar, M. F. (Eds.). (2019). Translation of evidence into nursing and healthcare (3rd ed.). Springer Publishing.
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