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Clinical Focus: Pediatrics - Review

The recent evolution of patient care rounds in pediatric teaching hospitals in the United States and Canada

ORCID Icon, , , , &
Pages 431-436 | Received 06 Jul 2021, Accepted 03 Sep 2021, Published online: 21 Sep 2021
 
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ABSTRACT

Introduction

National trends toward empowering and enabling patients and families to take a bigger role in their own medical care and enhanced collaboration between rounding stakeholders have effectuated a new rounding model in the pediatric inpatient setting known as ‘Patient- and Family-Centered Rounds/I-PASS,’ which has shown to decrease safety events and to improve stakeholders’ experience with rounding. Other enhancements to the new model, such as the use of whiteboards, rounding checklists, and facecards, have all been applied to the new model to good effect. Another major enhancement to rounding of late has been the application of a schedule to rounds, which has increased the presence of the nurse and the family during rounds and has improved rounding efficiency without a negative effect on teaching.

Objective

We provide a review of the literature regarding this new rounding model and its effects in the pediatric inpatient setting, as well as a review of the enhancements that have been applied to the new model, the recognized barriers to the implementation of these rounding alterations and the ways in which those barriers have been overcome. 

Conclusions

In the pediatric inpatient setting, the 'Patient and Family-Centered Rounds/IPASS' rounding model, as well as enhancements to this new model such as rounding schedules, whiteboards, checklists and facecards, have had a positive effect on stakeholders' experience with rounding, increased patient safety and improved rounding efficiency.  Given these positive effects, these alterations to rounding should be promoted and sustained.

PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY

Rounding is when a medical care provider, or a team of providers, visits patients in the hospital in order to determine a plan of care and discuss that care with the patient and the patient’s family. In teaching hospitals, this involves staff physicians, medical trainees and advanced practice providers. Rounding has changed in the recent past as evolving pressures have increasingly led these teams of providers to talk and make decisions about patients outside the patient’s room, which lessens the patient’s ability to contribute to decision-making. This also lessens the ability of the patient’s nurse to contribute. The recognition of this problem has led to big changes in rounding in children’s teaching hospitals, the biggest of which is called ‘family-centered rounding.’ This involves performing the entirety of rounds in the patients’ rooms, directing the discussion toward them in language that they understand, with the active participation of everyone present, including the patient’s nurse. Other changes in rounding, designed to improve patients’ experiences and decrease medical errors, have made this new rounding model even better. Structured communication during rounds, communication aids such as whiteboards and checklists, and planned times for rounding on each patient (‘scheduled rounding’) have all successfully been used to improve patients’ care and experience in the hospital. This article aims to inform the reader about family-centered rounds and other recent rounding transformations that have proven to increase patient safety and improve their experience while in the hospital, also noting barriers to these changes and how they have been overcome.

Declaration of funding

No funding was received to produce this article.

Declaration of financial/other relationships

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Peer reviewers on this manuscript have no relevant financial or other relationships to disclose.

Acknowledgments

None stated

Declaration of interest

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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