Excessive waits and
delays in emergency room care continue to make regular headlines in the national media. A Boston
Globe article said that emergency department (ED) overcrowding has prompted many
hospitals to spend “millions of dollars to expand their emergency rooms as a possible
solution.” But attempts to improve patient flow that focus only on the ED miss the
larger picture: effective patient flow is a property of the entire system and
can only be optimized at the system level. For example, EDs often divert patients because
hospitals lack the space to move patients forward. Simply increasing capacity in the ED will
not solve flow problems.
Poor patient flow affects all clinical areas. Quality of care is affected when patients are
placed in holding patterns, “boarded” in the ED or PACU, managed “off service,” or
subject to delayed medical or surgical admissions. Patient flow is a system-wide problem,
and must be solved at the system level.
IHI is pleased to offer a two-day seminar, Cracking the Code to Hospital-Wide Patient
Flow. Spend two days with expert faculty members Kirk Jensen,
MD, MBA, FACEP; Deb Kaczynski, MS; Kevin Nolan, MA; Roger
Resar, MD; and Marilyn Rudolph, RN, BSN, MBA, developing a two-year
patient flow plan specific to your own hospital. During this highly-interactive seminar,
we'll provide plenty of tools and strategies to execute your plan as you take your new knowledge
and skills back to your organization.
Click
here for more information about IHI scholarships.
For more information about this IHI program click
here or contact Afiya
Palmer at
(510)
874-7102.
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