I get into the hospital about 5am every day. I go to intake and get the daily census sheet and report it out to the providers. I walk upstairs and I get my census sheets for all four units. I call in a fourth provider if needed. I review my e-mails.
But at 7:30 am every day, I round. No exceptions. Weekday. Weekends. Holidays when I am supposed to be off. Doesn’t matter. I round. It has to be done, because I can’t manage what I can’t see.
So many times, compliance administrators and quality leaders sit in their office and manage through e-mail. Say they are too busy. Too many things to do. Yeah, too many meetings. But the truth is, you need to manage risk.
Risk comes in many forms . Financial. Patient-related. But the biggest unforeseen risk to me is reputational. If you don’t have a reputation for offering the best patient care while keeping people safe and patients receiving benefits from treatment, you won’t be successful. You won’t make money. You won’t care for patients. You need to see it. Firsthand.
You can’t manage what you can’t see. Here’s how I round.
I walk onto the units through the front entrance and immediately talk to the charge nurse.
I then walk down the hall and look in everyone’s room. Are the doors locked? Any ligature risks? Any contraband – things like cups, extra linens, things that someone could harm themselves with? You can’t manage what you can’t see. I walk into each room and just look.
Then up to all the techs. Same questions, plus ones like these:
I then walk through the nurse’s station to the sister units and do the same thing. Same questions. Then downstairs to the other two units. Same thing. Same questions.
You can’t manage what you can’t see. It takes about 45 minutes total, and it’s the most important part of the day. We have cameras, and I could look at the cameras and do this. But so much would be missed. You need to get onto the units. Why? Because you can’t manage what you can’t see.
There are three main reasons why I do rounding and in-person observation:
Only by being present can you get a real-time view of what’s done, what’s stuck and what is slipping through the cracks. Visibility is power. And I finished this round at 7:28. Two minutes to get upstairs, where they’re also expecting me.
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Andrea has taught first grade in Willoughby, Ohio for 27 years in the same classroom that she attended school as a child. She earned a Bachelor of Science in elementary education with a minor in language arts from John Carroll University and a Master’s Degree in the Art of Teaching and Education from Marygrove College.
John builds and fixes quality departments, while currently thriving as the Administrator & Director of Quality, Risk Management and Compliance at River Vista, a behavioral hospital in Columbus, Ohio.
The Q-Kids – John R Nocero and Andrea L Bordonaro – are experts at everything quality, regulatory, education training and compliance and love sharing their knowledge on YouCompli.
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