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Quality Improvement Initiative to Reduce Nighttime Noise in a Transplantation and Cellular Therapy Unit
Authors:Priscila Badia  Victoria Hickey  Laura Flesch  Megan Byerly  Chelsea Sensibaugh  Katherine Potts  Celia Michel  Alisha Drozd  Francis Curd  Lori Crosby  Dean Beebe  Stella M Davies  Christopher E. Dandoy
Affiliation:2. Department of Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio;3. Department of Patient Services, Cincinnati Children''s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio;4. James M. Anderson Center for Health Systems Excellence, Cincinnati Children''s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio;5. Department of Environmental Services, Cincinnati Children''s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio;6. Behavioral Medicine & Clinical Psychology, Cincinnati Children''s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio;1. Division of Bone Marrow Transplant and Immune Deficiency, Cincinnati Children''s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio;2. Department of Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio;3. Department of Patient Services, Cincinnati Children''s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio;4. James M. Anderson Center for Health Systems Excellence, Cincinnati Children''s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio;5. Department of Environmental Services, Cincinnati Children''s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio;6. Behavioral Medicine & Clinical Psychology, Cincinnati Children''s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio
Abstract:
Sleep is an essential biologic function vital for physiologic rest, healing, and emotional well-being. Sleep disruption is commonly seen in patients and caregivers with lengthy hospital stays such as patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and cellular therapy (TCT). Sleep disruption can lead to increased stress and fatigue, affecting caregivers’ ability to support their loved one. The global aim of our quality improvement initiative was to improve sleep quality in TCT patients and caregivers. The smart aim of our project was to decrease nighttime hallway noise from 47 dB to 43 dB and decrease the number of overnight noise peaks greater than 60 dB from 865 to 432 in 6 months. Through a cross-sectional quantitative and qualitative evaluation of sleep we had previously identified poor sleep quality, and with a cross-sectional focus group analysis of patients, caregivers, and medical staff we identified the factors associated with poor sleep. Hallway noise was a major factor. A simplified failure mode analysis identified 4 main key drivers; unobtrusive nighttime cleaning process, nighttime awareness maintenance system, quiet nighttime nursing system, and reliable nighttime awareness system. Several plan-do-study-act interventions took place and were adopted. From January to June 2018 the overnight mean decibel level decreased from 47 dB to 44 dB (6% reduction). Overnight noise spikes above 60 dB decreased from a mean of 865 spikes to a mean of 463 spikes (46% reduction). With a quality improvement initiative, we identified the causes of hallway nighttime hospital unit noise that negatively impact sleep and through a team-based approach performed interventions that successfully mitigated these factors.
Keywords:Correspondence and reprint requests: Priscila Badia, MD, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, 3333 Burnet Avenue, MLC 11027, Cincinnati, OH 45229.  Quality improvement  Patient experience  Sleep  Noise  Hospitalization  Recovery  Patient  Caregiver  Hematopoietic stem cell transplant
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