- Title
- Care zoning in a psychiatric intensive care unit: strengthening ongoing clinical risk assessment
- Creator
- Mullen, Antony; Drinkwater, Vincent; Lewin, Terry J.
- Relation
- Journal of Clinical Nursing Vol. 23, Issue 5-6, p. 731-743
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jocn.12493
- Publisher
- Wiley-Blackwell
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2014
- Description
- Aims and objectives: To implement and evaluate the care zoning model in an eight-bed psychiatric intensive care unit and, specifically, to examine the model's ability to improve the documentation and communication of clinical risk assessment and management. Background: Care zoning guides nurses in assessing clinical risk and planning care within a mental health context. Concerns about the varying quality of clinical risk assessment prompted a trial of the care zoning model in a psychiatric intensive care unit within a regional mental health facility. The care zoning model assigns patients to one of 3 'zones' according to their clinical risk, encouraging nurses to document and implement targeted interventions required to manage those risks. Design: An implementation trial framework was used for this research to refine, implement and evaluate the impact of the model on nurses' clinical practice within the psychiatric intensive care unit, predominantly as a quality improvement initiative. Methods: The model was trialled for three months using a pre- and postimplementation staff survey, a pretrial file audit and a weekly file audit. Informal staff feedback was also sought via surveys and regular staff meetings. Results: This trial demonstrated improvement in the quality of mental state documentation, and clinical risk information was identified more accurately. There was limited improvement in the quality of care planning and the documentation of clinical interventions. Nurses' initial concerns over the introduction of the model shifted into overall acceptance and recognition of the benefits. Conclusions: The results of this trial demonstrate that the care zoning model was able to improve the consistency and quality of risk assessment information documented. Care planning and evaluation of associated outcomes showed less improvement. Relevance to clinical practice: Care zoning remains a highly applicable model for the psychiatric intensive care unit environment and is a useful tool in guiding nurses to carry out routine patient risk assessments.
- Subject
- mental health nursing; practice development; risk assessment
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1307197
- Identifier
- uon:21360
- Identifier
- ISSN:0962-1067
- Language
- eng
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