• Patient focused – The core purpose of the electronic visual control board is to improve the quality and safety of patient care, by enabling ward staff to provide timely intervention where it’s needed most. Throughout the design and development process, patient safety, delivery of high quality care and experience was kept at the heart of the entire process.
• User engaged development process – The ward clinical staff were fully involved in the scoping and system design, the software solution was reviewed throughout the development process by ward users so they felt it was simple, intuitive and ‘personalised’ for the ward use.
• Collaborative innovation – The visual control board (MyWard) innovation is an excellent example of collaborative working between multi-disciplinary clinical and non-clinical teams. From scoping, design, development to release, every single step of the project was done through engagement from clinical (ward staff, nurses and consultants), and managerial staff, safer staffing and bed management team, Medical Director, Chief Operating Officer and the Quality Improvement Academy.
• Quality driven outcome – Well thought through small tests of change were carried out using Plan, Do, Study, Act methodology and appropriate processes to ensure that the Board was fit for use, and that it provided the right checks to maintain a high quality of care.
• Considered implementation – Fully supported training and practice guidance were provided by the Quality Improvement Academy and Informatics team. From day 1, ward staff were trained on how to use the electronic whiteboard software, and help guides were made available in different format, including easy read version. One staff member from the informatics team was present all day everyday for the first week of implementation to provide 1-1 assistance. The ward staff were encouraged by the level of operational and technical support, which in turn resulted into successful implementation of MyWard, and became an integral part of the clinical ward environment and fully embedded in their operational practice.
Measurable results:
• Ease of use – 21 staff participated in a recent survey to both wards, 95% said ‘The electronic whiteboard makes it easier to see what tasks need to be done for patients’. The whiteboard is easy to log onto, it only requires a 4 digit pin number which is unique to the ward.
• Sustainable innovation – The information is not easily corrupted/changed e.g. in early tests we noticed that a fly landing on the board changed the status of one of the clinical icons. Both wards now have high definition touch screen monitors which needs a human touch to operate the functionalities.
• Responsive Design – The electronic whiteboard information is translatable to a mobile IT platforms i.e. laptop and tablet etc. as long as the device was connected to the Trust secured network (N3).
• Improving patient safety – The legacy manual whiteboard took approx. 2 minutes per task, as staff needed to look into information from different systems, in ‘MyWard’ it takes approx. 30 seconds per action, therefore creating 63% time improvement for each action which is used for direct patient care.