“This process has shined a stark spotlight on how poorly we as physicians communicate with patients overall,” says Michael Pistoria, DO, SFHM, former hospitalist and president of medical staff at LVHN who was a member of the teach-back team.
“I’d like to think I’m a little above averagein this regard, but it has made me realize how much better I could be in checking in with patients, gauging their health literacy, and engaging them with the care plan. As hospitalists, we all have to rethink how we talk to patients and families.”
A multidisciplinary team, originally created to analyze care transitions, was divided into four work groups. One group, which focused on patient/family understanding of the disease process, quickly learned that care-team members often failed to identify the patient’s “key learner”—the patient, a family member, or someone else. If the information is given to the wrong person, breakdowns can result. Such breakdowns usually lead to readmissions. One instrumental change that came as a result of the QI team’s efforts is that LVHN care-team members now recognize it is their responsibility to ask who the key learner is and to put that person’s name on a whiteboard in the patient’s room.
In the workshop in at SHM’s annual meeting in San Diego, Kim Jordan, MHA, BSN, RN, NE-BC, LVHN’s administrator of patient-care services, described teach-back as an effective, easy-to-use communication strategy that improves patient learning outcomes. “We created a standard work process using teach-back strategies across the healthcare system,” with training offered to all professionals who provide education to patients and families, she said.
Starting with heart failure, prompts were written into the electronic health record (EHR) to provide four scripted teach-back questions, each focused on the patient’s knowledge, attitudes, and behavior, to be asked consecutively over three days. Information was “chunked” into manageable pieces, emphasizing what was most important for the patient to learn on that day.
Results from one of the pilot units showed 30-day readmission rates for heart failure patients were cut in half, from 28% to 14%.4 Teach-back scripts also are being developed for the anticoagulant clinic and for patients with stroke, myocardial infarction, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), community-acquired pneumonia, and diabetes.
“Continued analysis continues to show reduced rehospitalizations, and we even find that for those who are readmitted, their second admissions have been shorter,” Dr. Pistoria says, noting LVHN nurses have reported higher satisfaction. “They say, ‘This is wonderful. This is what I love about nursing—I get to teach the patients.’”
A Quality Mandate
The importance of effective communication with hospitalized patients is recognized in the federal Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS)5 quality ratings and, more recently, by Consumers Union’s new hospital safety ratings,6 which include communication in its six categories of patient-safety measures. And a recent study from the University of Washington says patients place high value on verbal communication about their discharge care plans and how to improve their health, and personal communication between their inpatient and outpatient providers.7
Large volumes of important information often are “dumped” on hospitalized patients, and many times patients are provided insufficient time to assimilate the information or ask questions about it.8 Such situations are especially common at discharge. And although physicians and other care-team members might feel they can’t afford the time to assure themselves that the patient understands what they are saying, the alternative is a lot more time spent dealing with preventable crises, misunderstandings—and preventable readmissions.
“People say, ‘I don’t have time for this,’” says Laura Vento, MSN, RN, clinical nurse leader on an acute-care medical unit at the University of California at San Diego medical center, who spearheaded teach-back at her hospital. “I did some observations around discharge visits, and it took an average of six minutes. After we implemented teach-back, it took eight to nine minutes. Nurses and patients were both very satisfied with the results. I say to staff: ‘Give it a try, and see what a difference an extra two minutes can make.’”