了解家长/监护人致电三级儿童心脏中心的规模及性质:服务评估。

Julie C Menzies, Kerry L Gaskin, Anna N Seale
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引用次数: 0

摘要

心脏缺陷是在英国出生的婴儿中第二大最常见的先天性异常,标准国家的家庭应该有机会获得儿童心脏护士专家的电话咨询服务。但是,几乎没有公开资料说明电话的性质和与电话支助有关的工作量。2019年4月至6月,我们对英国一家专业儿童心脏外科中心收到的父母/护理人员的电话进行了前瞻性服务评估。所有住院心脏病小组(心脏病学秘书、住院心脏病病房、门诊部和临床护士专家小组)被要求在一个专门设计的模板上记录通话。这包括记录通话时长和原因(从预先定义的类别),目的是确定电话的数量和性质。解决问题所采取的行动和时间没有记录。将数据输入Excel并使用描述性统计进行分析。在七周的时间里,他们接到了204个电话;41% (n = 83)为临床专科护士团队,25% (n = 51)为医务秘书,20% (n = 42)为心脏病房工作人员,14% (n = 28)为心脏门诊部。平均通话时长为6.08 min (SD为5.07 min)。所有组的通话时长总计为20.8小时。62个电话(占所有电话的31%)反映了对当前健康问题的70个关切/疑问。最常见的原因包括呼吸(n = 13)、心率或节律(n = 12)和胸痛/苍白(n = 11)。65个电话(占所有电话的32%)与药物相关问题有关,其中23% (n = 15)与剂量查询有关,49% (n = 32)与重复处方请求或获取处方的挑战有关。结果表明,对当前健康问题或药物查询的电话支持需求很高,这需要跨心脏服务部门工作的卫生保健专业人员及时评估和支持。需要进一步的研究来确定处理电话和干预的时间含义,以支持家长/监护人评估和沟通他们的担忧和药物管理。
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Understanding the Scale and Nature of Parent/Guardian Telephone Calls to a Tertiary Children's Cardiac Centre: A Service Evaluation.

Heart defects are the second most common congenital anomaly in babies born in the UK and standards state families should have access to a children's cardiac nurse specialist telephone advice service. However, there is little published information to describe the nature of calls and the workload associated with telephone support. We conducted a prospective service evaluation of telephone calls received at one UK specialist children's cardiac surgical center from parents/carers (April-June 2019). All inpatient cardiac teams (cardiology secretaries, inpatient cardiac wards, outpatient department and Clinical Nurse Specialist team) were asked to record calls on a purpose-designed template. This included recording of call duration and reason (from pre-defined categories), with the aim to identify the volume and nature of phone calls. Actions and time taken to resolve issues were not recorded. Data was entered into Excel and analyzed using descriptive statistics. In a seven-week period, 204 telephone calls were received; 41% (n = 83) to the clinical nurse specialist team, 25% (n = 51) to medical secretaries, 20% (n = 42) to cardiac ward staff and 14% (n = 28) to the cardiac outpatient department. The mean length of calls was 6.08 mins (SD 5.07 mins). Across all groups phone call duration totaled 20.8 hours. Sixty-two calls (31% of all calls) reflected 70 concerns/queries about a current health issue. The most common reasons included respiratory (n = 13), heart rate or rhythm (n = 12) and chest pain/pallor (n = 11). Sixty-five calls (32% of all calls) related to issues surrounding medications, with 23% (n = 15) related to dose queries and 49% (n = 32) related to repeat prescription requests or challenges obtaining prescriptions. The results demonstrated a high telephone support need for current health issues or medication queries which required timely assessment and support from health care professionals working across cardiac services. Further research is required to identify the time implications of dealing with phone calls and interventions to support parent/guardian assessment and communication about their concerns and medication management.

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