The 15 Steps Challenge provides a toolkit to help healthcare teams evaluate the quality of patient care from the patient's perspective. A 15 Steps Challenge team conducts ward walkarounds using the toolkit to assess four areas: Welcoming, Safe, Caring and Involving, and Well Organised and Calm. The team then provides feedback to the ward and trust sponsor to identify good practices and areas for improvement. Repeating the Challenge ensures continuous quality improvement by regularly incorporating the patient voice.
Novas diretrizes da OMS e Unicef para maternidades, casas de parto e centros de nascimento:
Protecting, promoting and supporting Breastfeeding in facilities providing maternity and newborn services: the revised
BABY-FRIENDLY HOSPITAL INITIATIVE
OMS e Unicef relançam os 10 passos da IHAC/BFHI leia em http://www.aleitamento.med.br/amamentacao/conteudo.asp?cod=2358
Novas diretrizes da OMS e Unicef para maternidades, casas de parto e centros de nascimento:
Protecting, promoting and supporting Breastfeeding in facilities providing maternity and newborn services: the revised
BABY-FRIENDLY HOSPITAL INITIATIVE
OMS e Unicef relançam os 10 passos da IHAC/BFHI leia em http://www.aleitamento.med.br/amamentacao/conteudo.asp?cod=2358
The slides contain a brief review of NACP 1 through 4.
Key achievements and challenges of NACP Phase 4 have been mentioned. Further, Key strategies of national strategic plan for elimination of HIV/AIDS 2017-2024 has been discussed.
Jan Arogya Samiti Introduction. under NHMpptxHarsha Wakodkar
useful for administrative purpose for all cadre working in public health department. all the healthcare professionals can use this for the details details of various rules and regulations, composition of JAS, process of registration, acting bodies at various levels, roles and responsibilities of the members of committee, various funds available under the scheme, norms for the fund utilization and areas where the fund can be used in a proper way for the betterment of patients and community.
Health for all- AN OVERVIEW OF DIFFERENT SCHEMES CULMINATING IN AYUSHMAN BHARATShiv Kumar
Health For All
Primary Health Care
National Health policy 1983
National Health policy 2002
National Rural Health Mission
National Health Mission
National Health Policy 2015
Ayushman Bharat
This presentation gives a thorough overview of the certified quality auditor (CQA) exam offered by the American Society for Quality (ASQ). The overview covers content of the exam, hints for passing the exam, tips for exam preparation, and a resource for exam preparation.
The slides contain a brief review of NACP 1 through 4.
Key achievements and challenges of NACP Phase 4 have been mentioned. Further, Key strategies of national strategic plan for elimination of HIV/AIDS 2017-2024 has been discussed.
Jan Arogya Samiti Introduction. under NHMpptxHarsha Wakodkar
useful for administrative purpose for all cadre working in public health department. all the healthcare professionals can use this for the details details of various rules and regulations, composition of JAS, process of registration, acting bodies at various levels, roles and responsibilities of the members of committee, various funds available under the scheme, norms for the fund utilization and areas where the fund can be used in a proper way for the betterment of patients and community.
Health for all- AN OVERVIEW OF DIFFERENT SCHEMES CULMINATING IN AYUSHMAN BHARATShiv Kumar
Health For All
Primary Health Care
National Health policy 1983
National Health policy 2002
National Rural Health Mission
National Health Mission
National Health Policy 2015
Ayushman Bharat
This presentation gives a thorough overview of the certified quality auditor (CQA) exam offered by the American Society for Quality (ASQ). The overview covers content of the exam, hints for passing the exam, tips for exam preparation, and a resource for exam preparation.
If you are involved in treating patients, managing and/or improving health services or
managing or training those that do, you will understand the importance of providing the
best care possible for all our patients.
Great progress has been made in improving service standards and access and in reducing
waiting times, but there is still some way to go to ensure consistently high standards of
patient care across the NHS.
It is clear that we need to ensure we are getting it right first time, which means better care
and better value through the reduction of waste and errors and the prioritisation of effective
treatments. Quality, innovation, productivity and prevention (QIPP) is the mechanism through
which we can achieve this.
QIPP is about creating an environment in which change and improvement can flourish; it
is about leading differently and in a way that fosters a culture of innovation; and it is
about providing staff with the tools, techniques and support that will enable them to take
ownership of improving quality of care.
The Handbook of Quality and Service Improvement Tools from the NHS Institute brings
together a collection of proven tools, theories and techniques to help NHS staff design and
implement quality improvement projects that do not compromise on the quality and safety of
patient care but rather enhance the patient experience.
A good overview of the ASQ Certified Quality Engineer (CQE) exam including subjects covered, subjects requiring special instruction, tips for test preparation, and resources for training.
The Top 7 Outcomes Measures and 3 Measurement EssentialsHealth Catalyst
Outcomes improvement can’t happen without effective outcomes measurement. Given the healthcare industry’s administrative and regulatory complexities, and the fact that health systems measure and report on hundreds of outcomes annually, this blog adds much-needed clarity by reviewing the top seven outcome measures, including definitions, important nuances, and real-life examples:
Mortality
Readmissions
Safety of care
Effectiveness of care
Patient experience
Timeliness of care
Efficient use of medical imaging
CMS used these exact seven outcome measures to calculate overall hospital quality and arrive at its 2016 hospital star ratings. This blog also reiterates the importance of outcomes measurement, clarifies how outcome measures are defined and prioritized, and recommends three essentials for successful outcomes measurement:
Transparency
Integrated care
Interoperability
10 principles for designing quality control scorecard and KPIsAleksey Savkin
A Balanced Scorecard is not positioned as a quality control tool, but regularly I see among our users efforts to integrate quality-related metrics into their Balanced Scorecards, or simply create a KPI scorecards with a bulk of different quality indicators. I've compiled the list of 10 best practices that we've learned from these cases.
As always, I'd like to hear your opinion. Do you use quality indicators on your business scorecard?
Based on: http://www.bscdesigner.com/10-tips-about-using-business-scorecard-and-kpis-for-ongoing-quality-control.htm
Why Process Measures Are Often More Important Than Outcome Measures in Health...Health Catalyst
The healthcare industry is currently obsessed with outcome measures — and for good reason. But tracking outcome measures alone is insufficient to reach the goals of better quality and reduced costs. Instead, health systems must get more granular with their data by tracking process measures. Process measures make it possible to identify the root cause of a health system’s failures. They’re the checklists of systematically guaranteeing that the right care will be delivered to every patient, every time. By using these checklists, organizations will be able to improve quality and cost by reducing the amount of variation in care delivery.
Quality Improvement In Healthcare: Where Is The Best Place To Start?Health Catalyst
One of the biggest challenges providers face in their quality improvement efforts is knowing where to get started. In my experience, one of the best ways to overcome that “where do we begin?” factor is by using data from an enterprise data warehouse to look for high-cost areas where there are large variations in how health care is delivered. Variation found through the KPA is an indicator of opportunity. The more avoidable variation that is reflected in a particular care process, the more opportunity there is to reduce that variation and standardize the process. Suppose after performing a KPA you discover three areas of opportunity. How do you determine which one to pursue, especially if it’s your first journey into process improvement? The most obvious answer would seem to be the one with the largest potential ROI. That may not always be the best course to pursue, however. You will also want to take into consideration the readiness/openness to change in each of those areas.
Kings Road Medical Centre rated Outstanding by Care Quality Commissionatmedics
AT Medics is a leading provider of Primary Healthcare services in London and recently achieved an “Outstanding” Care Quality Commission (CQC) rating for Kings Road Medical Centre, making it one of only seven practices in London to achieve this distinguished accolade under the CQCs new inspection approach. Nationally, just 84 practices have been rated as “Outstanding”.
Title: Active Patient Engagement: mHealth as a Tool for Interaction
Description: In the second session, attendees will hear about how to develop an mHealth program, snapshots of mobile tools used to drive patient engagement and how to approach measuring the value of mHealth. The mobile tools discussed include mobile apps and devices, text messaging and patient portals.
Speakers: Chanin Wendling MBA
Objectives: Discuss the value of mHealth for patient engagement and how to define your program. Illustrate the use of mobile tools to influence patient behavior. Outline options for measuring success
Running Head QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PLAN 1QUALITY IMPROVEMENT .docxtoltonkendal
Running Head: QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PLAN 1
QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PLAN 12
Quality Improvement Plan; Mayo Clinic
Introduction
Quality in the healthcare organisation is of paramount importance. This is not only for the purpose of ensuring that more customers are attracted to the business but also to make sure that the services being offered comply with the standard that are required for medical practitioners. Quality in mayo clinic is realised through various ways in accordance with the services that are offered. Each personal work strives to ensure that quality medical services are offered. Mayo clinic is a healthcare facility that offers medical services at a fee. People who attend the facility come with the hope of getting quality services they are paying for; this is the driving force of the facility- to ensure that quality services are offered.
With the above being said, the purpose of this paper is to evaluate quality improvement for conflict in mayo clinic caused by diversity of cultures.
Description of the environment and the departments of mayo clinic
Mayo clinic is located in different parts of the United States of America, with over 3300 physicians, researchers and other professionals sharing expertise to empower its clients. Being among one of the renowned healthcare organizations, mayo clinic is not without its own weaknesses. Many of these weaknesses as presented in the SWOT analysis were obtained from the interview conducted in this environment (Bauer, Kermott, Millman, & Mayo Clinic, 2017). The objective of this healthcare organization is to provide quality services in order to attract more customers seeking for services. Therefore, seeking quality plans to counter the possible weaknesses arising in the departments is inevitable.
In order to embrace the tradition of providing quality in all areas, such as the effectiveness of Medicare program, mayo clinic utilizes the department ad centres for research (Bauer, Kermott, Millman, & Mayo Clinic, 2017). Irrespective of the various challenges this healthcare organization go through, its belief that quality improvement is an endless task makes it moving. The research department and centres always endeavour to identify every possible gap in health care provisions going on in the different departments as a foundation of solution seeking.
The services offered in mayo clinic ranges from consumer services to business services. For the former, this healthcare organization offers health living programs, book and related programs, health letter for future reference, gift shop and mayo clinic voice apps which helps the customers to get health services in a convenient way using technological means (Bauer, Kermott, Millman, & Mayo Clinic, 2017). On the other hand, business services offered by this healthcare organization include medical laboratory services and Global business solutions.
In regard to the equipment being used at mayo clinic, the belief is that provision of care to patie ...
3 Strategies for Maximizing Service Line Efficiency, Quality and ProfitabilityWellbe
Maximizing service line efficiency, quality and profitability is a hot topic, particularly with rising patient care demands, changing reimbursement models, and estimated physician shortfalls. This webinar takes a look at three solutions beginning in the operating room and expanding to the entire patient care journey.
1st solution: A unique clinical and operational service model focused on the specialization of qualified, reimbursable clinical labor to optimize surgeon involvement and reduce OR costs.
2nd solution: Taking a holistic view of the service line through the patient care journey to produce a value stream map to understand the current state. Assisting staff with comparing this current state to the ideal future state, comparing national benchmarks and clinical best practices helps your staff innovate and co-create an individualized plan to get your service line to a higher level.
3rd solution: Utilizing dashboard metrics of the critical to success factors, to sustain and improve your service line.
As a participant, you will be able to:
• Identify key operational and clinical indicators of orthopedic service line efficiency
• Describe how Surgical First Assists can add value in the OR
• List the steps in developing and/or evaluating or building an orthopedic service line
• Describe how metrics/dashboards assist in sustaining change and improvement of orthopedic service line
About the Speaker:
Miki Patterson, PHD ONP, Senior Director of Orthopedics in Intelligent CareDesign at Intralign
Dr. Patterson is a certified orthopedic nurse practitioner and brings over 25 years of clinical experience in healthcare, consulting, direct advanced orthopedic patient care, teaching, NIH level, qualitative and quantitative research and publishing. She is a past president of the National Association of Orthopedic Nurses (NAON) and continues to be nationally recognized for leadership and advancing orthopedic care.
Nursing home self assessment surveys and patient satisfactionCare Analytics
Care Analytics assessments are important because they give you a realistic view of what is happening in the day-to-day practice of your facility. They help you sort out problems that need considerable work from issues that appear to be working reasonably well and perhaps need only staff reminders to be on
track. Unlike surveys in which you try to put your best foot forward, this is a survey that requires you to look at both feet honestly and constructively.
This Guide for Executives is aimed at senior healthcare leaders. It provides 31 practical tips for leaders
who want to contribute positively to the culture for innovation in their organisations and systems.
A more in-depth practitioners guide, Creating the Culture for Innovation, provides much more
detailed advice and guidance, a host of additional examples, and information about an online staff
survey that can be used to assess, benchmark and understand the culture for innovation.
The Sustainability Model is a diagnostic tool that will identify strengths and
weaknesses in your implementation plan and predict the likelihood of sustainability
for your improvement initiative.
The Sustainability Guide provides practical advice on how you might increase the
likelihood of sustainability for your improvement initiative.
Pathways to Success: a self-improvement toolkit Focus on normal birth and reducing Caesarean section rates
Caesarean section (CS) has an important role in ensuring safe maternity care. How can we make
sure that every Caesarean is appropriate, effective and efficient?
The NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement is working with NHS clinical staff to promote best practice in achieving low CS rates while maintaining safe outcomes for mothers and babies.
This toolkit is designed to help maternity services review and assess their current practice in promoting normal birth and reducing CS rates. The toolkit also provides practical techniques to support sustainable changes in maternity services.
A practical, introductory guide to thinking differently. It is not a comprehensive blueprint nor is it designed to make you an expert in thinking. But it will get you started on
a journey of thinking differently, and therefore doing things differently, that we hope continues well into
your future.
We have selected concepts and thinking tools that have proven their value, ease, and applicability in a
variety of industries and in over five years of experience with front line teams in various NHS organisations.
We’ll provide you with just enough background theory to help you see why the various thinking tools ask
you to do certain things that might seem a bit odd at first. But the emphasis here is not on dry theory or
abstract concepts. Rather, it is on developing new thinking that leads to new ways of doing.
The ebd approach (experience based design) is a method of designing better experiences for patients, carers and staff. The approach captures the experiences of those involved in healthcare services. It involves looking at the care journey
and in addition the emotional journey people
experience when they come into contact with a particular pathway or part of the service. Staff work together with patients and carers to firstly understand these experiences and then to improve them.
This guide is an introduction to the ebd approach (experience based design).
This guide and toolkit has been produced as
a result of work that the NHS Institute for
Innovation and Improvement has undertaken in collaboration with NHS organisations and external agencies, using the experience of patients, carers and staff to design better
healthcare services.
This document is one of a series of documents that was produced by the NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement as part of the High Volume Care programme.
Produced by the Delivering Quality and Value Team, the aim of the Focus on series was to help local health communities and organisations improve the quality
and value of the care they deliver
Support Sheet 18: PPC
This support sheet provides a description of Preferred Priorities for Care, a tool for the discussion and recording of end of life care wishes and preferences.
Support Sheet 15: Enhancing the Healing Environment
This support sheet outlines key design principles for end of life care environments and provides tips for managing an environmental improvement project
Support Sheet 14: Using the NHS Continuing Health Care Fast Track Pathway Tool
This support sheet provides answers to frequently asked questions about the NHS Continuing Health Care Fast Track Pathway Tool.
Support Sheet 13: Decisions made in a person's 'Best Interests'
This support sheet outlines the process for making decisions on behalf of someone who lacks capacity.
Support Sheet 12: Mental Capacity Act (2005)
This support sheet outlines the main provisions of the Mental Capacity Act the four tests essential for assessing capacity
Support Sheet 11: Quality Markers for Acute Hospitals
This support sheet outlines the quality markers by which acute hospitals can measure the standard of end of life care they provide.
Support Sheet 7: Models/Tools of Delivery
This support sheet outlines the key elements of
Advance Care Planning (ACP)
Gold Standards Framework (GSF)
Liverpool Care Pathway (LCP)
Support Sheet 5: Quality Markers for Care Homes
This support sheet outlines the quality markers by which care homes can measure the standard of end of life care they provide.
Stem Cell Solutions: Dr. David Greene's Path to Non-Surgical Cardiac CareDr. David Greene Arizona
Explore the groundbreaking work of Dr. David Greene, a pioneer in regenerative medicine, who is revolutionizing the field of cardiology through stem cell therapy in Arizona. This ppt delves into how Dr. Greene's innovative approach is providing non-surgical, effective treatments for heart disease, using the body's own cells to repair heart damage and improve patient outcomes. Learn about the science behind stem cell therapy, its benefits over traditional cardiac surgeries, and the promising future it holds for modern medicine. Join us as we uncover how Dr. Greene's commitment to stem cell research and therapy is setting new standards in healthcare and offering new hope to cardiac patients.
Empowering ACOs: Leveraging Quality Management Tools for MIPS and BeyondHealth Catalyst
Join us as we delve into the crucial realm of quality reporting for MSSP (Medicare Shared Savings Program) Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs).
In this session, we will explore how a robust quality management solution can empower your organization to meet regulatory requirements and improve processes for MIPS reporting and internal quality programs. Learn how our MeasureAble application enables compliance and fosters continuous improvement.
The dimensions of healthcare quality refer to various attributes or aspects that define the standard of healthcare services. These dimensions are used to evaluate, measure, and improve the quality of care provided to patients. A comprehensive understanding of these dimensions ensures that healthcare systems can address various aspects of patient care effectively and holistically. Dimensions of Healthcare Quality and Performance of care include the following; Appropriateness, Availability, Competence, Continuity, Effectiveness, Efficiency, Efficacy, Prevention, Respect and Care, Safety as well as Timeliness.
TEST BANK For Accounting Information Systems, 3rd Edition by Vernon Richardso...rightmanforbloodline
TEST BANK For Accounting Information Systems, 3rd Edition by Vernon Richardson, Verified Chapters 1 - 18, Complete Newest Version
TEST BANK For Accounting Information Systems, 3rd Edition by Vernon Richardson, Verified Chapters 1 - 18, Complete Newest Version
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This document is designed as an introductory to medical students,nursing students,midwives or other healthcare trainees to improve their understanding about how health system in Sri Lanka cares children health.
CHAPTER 1 SEMESTER V PREVENTIVE-PEDIATRICS.pdfSachin Sharma
This content provides an overview of preventive pediatrics. It defines preventive pediatrics as preventing disease and promoting children's physical, mental, and social well-being to achieve positive health. It discusses antenatal, postnatal, and social preventive pediatrics. It also covers various child health programs like immunization, breastfeeding, ICDS, and the roles of organizations like WHO, UNICEF, and nurses in preventive pediatrics.
LGBTQ+ Adults: Unique Opportunities and Inclusive Approaches to CareVITASAuthor
This webinar helps clinicians understand the unique healthcare needs of the LGBTQ+ community, primarily in relation to end-of-life care. Topics include social and cultural background and challenges, healthcare disparities, advanced care planning, and strategies for reaching the community and improving quality of care.
Dr. David Greene R3 stem cell Breakthroughs: Stem Cell Therapy in CardiologyR3 Stem Cell
Dr. David Greene, founder and CEO of R3 Stem Cell, is at the forefront of groundbreaking research in the field of cardiology, focusing on the transformative potential of stem cell therapy. His latest work emphasizes innovative approaches to treating heart disease, aiming to repair damaged heart tissue and improve heart function through the use of advanced stem cell techniques. This research promises not only to enhance the quality of life for patients with chronic heart conditions but also to pave the way for new, more effective treatments. Dr. Greene's work is notable for its focus on safety, efficacy, and the potential to significantly reduce the need for invasive surgeries and long-term medication, positioning stem cell therapy as a key player in the future of cardiac care.
Deep Leg Vein Thrombosis (DVT): Meaning, Causes, Symptoms, Treatment, and Mor...The Lifesciences Magazine
Deep Leg Vein Thrombosis occurs when a blood clot forms in one or more of the deep veins in the legs. These clots can impede blood flow, leading to severe complications.
Cold Sores: Causes, Treatments, and Prevention Strategies | The Lifesciences ...The Lifesciences Magazine
Cold Sores, medically known as herpes labialis, are caused by the herpes simplex virus (HSV). HSV-1 is primarily responsible for cold sores, although HSV-2 can also contribute in some cases.
KEY Points of Leicester travel clinic In London doc.docxNX Healthcare
In order to protect visitors' safety and wellbeing, Travel Clinic Leicester offers a wide range of travel-related health treatments, including individualized counseling and vaccines. Our team of medical experts specializes in getting people ready for international travel, with a particular emphasis on vaccines and health consultations to prevent travel-related illnesses. We provide a range of travel-related services, such as health concerns unique to a trip, prevention of malaria, and travel-related medical supplies. Our clinic is dedicated to providing top-notch care, keeping abreast of the most recent recommendations for vaccinations and travel health precautions. The goal of Travel Clinic Leicester is to keep you safe and well-rested no matter what kind of travel you choose—business, pleasure, or adventure.
DECODING THE RISKS - ALCOHOL, TOBACCO & DRUGS.pdfDr Rachana Gujar
Introduction: Substance use education is crucial due to its prevalence and societal impact.
Alcohol Use: Immediate and long-term risks include impaired judgment, health issues, and social consequences.
Tobacco Use: Immediate effects include increased heart rate, while long-term risks encompass cancer and heart disease.
Drug Use: Risks vary depending on the drug type, including health and psychological implications.
Prevention Strategies: Education, healthy coping mechanisms, community support, and policies are vital in preventing substance use.
Harm Reduction Strategies: Safe use practices, medication-assisted treatment, and naloxone availability aim to reduce harm.
Seeking Help for Addiction: Recognizing signs, available treatments, support systems, and resources are essential for recovery.
Personal Stories: Real stories of recovery emphasize hope and resilience.
Interactive Q&A: Engage the audience and encourage discussion.
Conclusion: Recap key points and emphasize the importance of awareness, prevention, and seeking help.
Resources: Provide contact information and links for further support.
PET CT beginners Guide covers some of the underrepresented topics in PET CTMiadAlsulami
This lecture briefly covers some of the underrepresented topics in Molecular imaging with cases , such as:
- Primary pleural tumors and pleural metastases.
- Distinguishing between MPM and Talc Pleurodesis.
- Urological tumors.
- The role of FDG PET in NET.
PET CT beginners Guide covers some of the underrepresented topics in PET CT
The 15 steps challenge toolkit
1. The Fifteen Steps Challenge
Quality from a patient’s perspective
Part of the Productive Care resources
15 Steps
Challenge
Quality
from
a patient’s pers
pective
2.
3. 3
Contents
1. Background 5
2. Purpose of this Challenge tool 6
3. How do we use this Challenge tool? 10
4. The 15 Steps Challenge - what to look out for 15
• Welcoming 15
• Safe 16
• Caring and involving 17
• Well organised and calm 18
5. Reporting back 21
6. Developing actions and next steps 23
7. Embedding the 15 Steps Challenge into regular reviews and continous 24
improvement
Appendices
Appendix 1 Frequently Asked Questions 26
Appendix 2 Template for a useful ward notice for staff and patients 29
Appendix 3 Action Plan template 30
Appendix 4 Links to useful resources 31
5. 5
1. Background
Both patients and NHS staff have high expectations for safe, good quality care, delivered in welcoming
and clean environments. The Productive Ward programme helps the NHS to deliver this ambition.
The Productive Ward (sometimes known as the Releasing time to care™) programme, works with teams
in hospital trusts, supporting staff to identify time wasting activities, duplication and inefficiencies that
take time away from caring for patients.
The programme identifies simple changes like protecting meal times, protecting drug rounds and
preventing interruptions at staff handovers; these improvements can reduce errors and improve safety. In
implementing The Productive Ward staff have freed up on average 20-30% of additional time, which can
be spent with patients. This has a huge impact on improving the quality of care for patients in a visible
and tangible way.
During our work with The Productive Ward programme we held a number of workshops with patients
and relatives. At one of these workshops a mother spoke up. She told us about her daughter, whose
condition needed frequent inpatient stays. She told us “I can tell what kind of care my daughter is going
to get within 15 steps of walking on to a ward”. This made us realise that it is really important to
understand what good quality care looks and feels like from a patient’s perspective. This sparked the
development of “The 15 Steps Challenge”, a toolkit to help look at hospital care through the eyes of
patients and relatives, helping to hear what good looks like.
The 15 Steps Challenge has been developed by working with staff and patients linked to The Productive
Ward programme, but the 15 Steps Challenge is a useful tool even if you are not delivering The
Productive Ward.
“The patient is the most important person in our hospital. He is not an interrruption to our work: he is
the purpose of it. He is not an outside in our hospital: he is part of it. We are not doing him a favour by
serving him: he is doing us a favour by giving us the opportunity to do it!”
Mahatma Ghandi
6. 6
2. Purpose of this Challenge tool
“I can tell what kind of care my
daughter is going to get within 15
steps of walking on to a ward”
quote from parent that sparked
the Challenge
First impressions count
• First impressions give us our initial feeling about any situation. When we first arrive on a ward,
does it inspire confidence in the care that we are about to receive?
• What makes us trust a care environment? What makes us feel that we will be safe and cared for?
• What are the first clues to high quality care?
• What does good look, feel, sound and smell like?
The 15 Steps Challenge is a toolkit with a series of questions and prompts to guide you through your first
impressions of a ward. The Challenge will help you gain an understanding of how patients feel about the
care provided and how high levels of confidence can be built. This tool can also help trusts understand and
identify the key components of high quality care that are important to patients and carers from their first
contact with a ward.
The Challenge is designed to help trusts on their continuous improvement journey. By enabling the patient’s
voice to be heard clearly, the tool can be used to highlight what is working well and what might be done to
increase patient confidence.
The Challenge strongly aligns with a range of strategic initiatives including supporting improvements to
quality, safety and patient experience. It should be sponsored by the trust senior leaders and form part of
wider improvement activity.
The purpose of the 15 Steps Challenge is to:
• help staff, patients and others to work together to identify improvements that can be made to enhance
the patient experience
• provide a way of understanding patients’ first impressions more clearly. It describes how a small 15 Steps
Challenge team can explore what the patient is experiencing by undertaking ward walkarounds. The 15
Steps Challenge team can then give the trust structured feedback and useful information about how
patients and carers view the hospital or ward
7. 7
• provide a method for creating positive improvements in the quality of care through identifying what is
working well on wards and what could be improved – it supports the sharing of good practice and
concentrating on some patient experience improvements
• offer a tool that anyone can use to explore care environments. However, it is vital that the 15 Steps
Challenge has a lead sponsor within the trust who can organise the practical issues of visiting care
settings and can champion the feedback and actions to take after the challenge has been completed
• develop a collaborative process and must include both staff and patient representatives
• the Challenge is NOT a performance management tool
• the Challenge is NOT an audit (clinical, quality, safety or otherwise).
“This fits in so well with the work we are doing around the environment for people with dementia and our
caring for carers.”
Senior Nurse, Dementia Care, Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust
When should we use the 15 Steps Challenge?
There is no set time for undertaking the 15 Steps Challenge. It should be used to support other quality work
that your trust is doing, so it is important to understand and agree how it will align and inform other work.
Feedback has shown that the Challenge is useful in the following contexts:
• while implementing The Productive Ward
• as part of improving patient experience programmes
• to support and inform PEAT Inspections (Patient Environment Action Team), but does not duplicate these,
since the focus of the 15 Steps Challenge is on exploring first impressions and confidence in care from
the patients’ perspective, from when they first enter the ward.
• prior to Care Quality Commission (CQC) inspections in preparation for visits
• as part of The Productive Ward visit pyramids, putting the patient’s voice at the heart of this.
While the 15 Steps Challenge has been designed to support The Productive Ward, the principles are equally
transferrable to any ward. The Challenge will help wards understand how they are doing from a patient’s
perspective. The Challenge can be used at any point during a trust’s Productive Ward journey.
• It can be used before implementing The Productive Ward programme to understand the starting point.
• It is useful to complete after The Productive Ward has been implemented, as the tool will give a valuable
understanding of what progress has been made and how the improvements are being maintained.
• Undertaking regular reviews, it can help encourage sustainable implementation of The Productive Ward
programme.
“We linked it to the Productives, patient communication and patient experience. As a new organisation, we
hope to integrate this with all of our patient quality and safety agenda.”
Chief Nurse, First Community Health & Care C.I.C. (Community Interest Company)
8. 8
How does The Challenge align with other strategic initiatives?
Care Quality Commission Standards
This tool has been developed to align with a number of the Care Quality Commission’s core quality
standards. Evidence of good practice identified through The 15 Steps Challenge may be useful material to
supply in support of a Care Quality Commission inspection, or the development of a Quality Account.
In undertaking this Challenge, the team may note good practice or evidence in relation to the following
Care Quality Commission quality standards:
n Outcome 1 – Respecting and involving people who use the services
n Outcome 4 – Care and welfare of people who use services
n Outcome 5 – Meeting nutritional needs
n Outcome 8 – Cleanliness and infection control
n Outcome 9 – Management of medicines
n Outcome 10 – Safety and suitability of premises
n Outcome 11 – Safety, availability and suitability of equipment
n Outcome 16 – Assessing and monitoring the quality of service provision
National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence
The tool also matches many of the quality standards developed by the National Institute for Health and
Clinical Excellence:
“Quality standard for patient experience in adult NHS services: improving the experience of care for people
using adult NHS services.”
9. 9
The NHS Operating Framework and Outcomes Framework 2012/13 both stress the importance of
putting patients at the heart of their care experience.
It aligns strongly with several of the Royal College of Nursing’s Principles of Nursing Practice.
“NHS Hertfordshire have been undertaking Quality Assurance Visits to all Hertfordshire providers for a
number of years and whilst we had been using a checklist for the visits we were excited at the prospect of
trialling the 15 Steps Challenge as it provided us with an evidenced based tool to strengthen our
methodology. The 15 Steps Challenge mirrored what we were already looking for when we undertook
visits and we found it worked well with our existing process. Firstly we used the Challenge as a training tool
for staff who have not undertaken visits before or for staff who do not have a clinical background as it
gave them an idea of what we did on a visit. As part of the trial we used the tool on three of our visits,
which were to a maternity unit, an elderly care ward and a rehabilitation unit. Our visits covered three very
different care settings but the principle of the 15 Steps Challenge remained the same and showed that the
tool can also be used by commissioners.”
NHS Hertfordshire, Quality and Patient Experience Team
10. 10
3. How do we use this Challenge tool?
“[Using the tool while] visiting other ward areas and comparing the
differences between the wards, enabled the sharing of ideas and
good practices.”
Ward Sister, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust
“People really liked this tool, for the first time we had more patient
representatives than staff involved in our walkarounds.”
Deputy Director of Nursing, Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust
The actions below outline the process of the 15 Steps Challenge.
Action 2 Action 3 Action 4 Action 5 Action 6Action 1
Identify a trust
sponsor and
project
co-ordinator
Identify your 15
Steps walkaround
team and read
the toolkit
Use the toolkit in
this publication
and undertake
ward walkarounds
Feedback to the
trust sponsor and
to the wards,
sharing good
practice
Identify actions
and next steps
Repeat the
Challenge!
It is important that the 15 Steps Challenge has a senior sponsor. This might be
the Director of Nursing or another Executive lead. The sponsor ensures that The
15 Steps Challenge is aligned to strategic priorities for the trust and supports
Board to Ward involvement.
The trust sponsor’s role is to champion the 15 Steps Challenge across the trust.
It is important to communicate with both the Executive team and with frontline
teams that The 15 Steps Challenge will be happening within the trust. This
preparation work is essential so that everyone is aware of the purpose of the
Challenge and understands that it is about improving care for patients. It is a
good way to get “fresh eyes” and patients/carers views on how to improve
care. The Challenge offers a way for people to work together on improvement,
it is not an audit! The trust sponsor will also ensure that any corporate themes
emerging from the Challenge can be addressed strategically and that good
practice is shared and excellence celebrated. It is good practice to let staff know
that the walkarounds are happening, it isn’t necessary to tell staff which wards
will be visited.
The trust sponsor may choose to identify a project co-ordinator for the 15 Steps
Challenge. The Project co-ordinator ensures that the 15 Steps walkaround team
are recruited and briefed, any practical issues are addressed, keeping track of
feedback from the Challenge and ensuring this is raised with the trust sponsor.
Action 1
Identify a trust
sponsor and
project
co-ordinator
11. 11
This is the team of around three or four people that bring different perspectives
to the group that will undertake the ward walkarounds.
It is good practice to include staff with different perspectives e.g, Productive
Ward leads, Patient Engagement leads, ward based staff, Health Care
Assistants, therapists. Including non-clinical staff also brings valuable fresh eyes,
for example staff from human resources, estates or governance teams. These
teams may also help with improvements that arise from the Challenge.
Patient input can come from a range of sources, often current patients are
happy to be involved in exercises like the 15 Steps Challenge. Alternatively the
trust may have a patient council or forum, or may be aligned to a Local
Involvement Network (LINk) or Healthwatch group with volunteers who
represent patients’ views. Some trusts are asking patients who have recently
made a complaint to join the 15 Steps Challenge team and help identify
improvements. Your Patient Advisory Liaison team can often help with this.
The team should include a Governor/ a Non-executive Director and/or Executive
Director.
The 15 Step Challenge team should aim to meet together three times.
1) Meet for a briefing prior to starting the Challenge. Invite the patient,
staff and non-executive director/governor representative to ensure
that everyone is clear about the Challenge and has read the toolkit.
It is useful to cover practicalities including how many and which
wards will be part of the Challenge, dates and times of the
walkaround, expectations of the walkaround and any follow up that
might be required.
2) Meet to undertake the ward walkarounds and on the same day,
meet afterwards to discuss feedback and findings.
3) Meet to repeat the walkaround and explore progress (the date for
this needs to be agreed at the time of the walkaround).
The Challenge tool asks the team to explore the quality of care under four
categories; “Welcoming”, “Safe”, “Caring and Involving” and “Well organised
and Calm”. On the day of the ward walkarounds start with a quick briefing. Ensure
that everyone is clear about the tool. It is helpful for each Challenge team member
to take on the role of focusing on one specific category. Agree the roles that your
15 Steps Challenge team will perform.
• With your 15 Steps Challenge team take 15 steps into the ward – not always
literally – the point is to walk into the public space of the ward environment and
get a feel for how the ward operates.
• It is good practice to let the ward team know that you are on the ward.
• Use your senses to build your first impressions and then look deeper – try to
pinpoint some of the detail in what you experience.
Action 2
Identify your 15
Steps walkaround
team and read
the toolkit
Action 3
Use the toolkit in
this publication
and undertake
ward walkarounds
12. 12
Agree actions that need to happen after the walkaround. If there was good
practice to share, agree how this will be done and who will do it. There may be a
number of improvements identified during the ward walkarounds that can be put
in place quickly, some may be more complex. Agree what actions can be taken
forward by the ward team, what needs to be taken forward by other teams and
where the trust sponsor should have some strategic input. Can actions be aligned
with other initiatives?
The 15 Steps Challenge is designed to help with continuous improvement. Regular
reviews with walkaround teams will help ensure that good practice is frequently
identified and rapidly shared. It also ensures that improvements are identified and
actions are being delivered. Regularly taking the time to hear patients and carers
perspective’s will support them to feel confident in their care from the outset.
Action 5
Identify actions
and next steps
Action 6
Repeat the
Challenge!
The 15 Steps Challenge team should record their impressions from the ward
walkarounds (there is space for this on pages 15 to 18).
• Sit down together as a 15 Steps Challenge team after the walkarounds and
decide on the key points that you want to feedback.
• Share the highlights with the ward leader as quickly as possible.
• Make sure the feedback includes the great things that were observed. Celebrate
the positives, this is about sharing good practice!
• Ensure that areas that could be improved are also identified.
• Ensure that the team also feeds back to your trust sponsor. Pick out key themes
that are emerging rather than the specific details for each ward. It is their role to
ensure that strategic support is given to help deliver any improvements identified.
• Use the Challenge guides on pages 15 to 18 to structure your thoughts and
record your comments.
• The focus is on first impressions. What do patients and visitors see? What is
important to them?
• Spending about 15 minutes on the ward is usually enough time to do this.
Explore the publicly visible spaces. What interactions can be observed? What do
you notice that can be shared with other ward teams and spread to every ward?
Absorb how the ward makes you feel.
Action 4
Feedback to the
trust sponsor and
to the wards,
sharing good
practice
13. 13
Tips for the ward walkaround
Let staff teams know that the 15 Steps Challenge is happening before the day of the walkaround – it can be
useful to use the template poster for staff and patients in Appendix 2.
The visit on the day of the walkaround should be unannounced. Remember to brief the 15 Steps Challenge team
on your infection control procedures.
Have a good look around you and work through the Challenge guide on pages 15 to 18 Based on our research,
we have grouped these under four easy to use headings.
a) Welcoming
b) Safe
c) Caring and involving
d) Well organised and calm
Even before walking into the ward area spend some time noticing the entrance area – what is it like, is there
useful information, is it locked but with procedures to access the ward? If this is the case, make sure that the 15
Steps Challenge team uses these procedures and “buzzes” in like a patient rather than “swipes” in as staff are
able to do.
Walk slowly into the ward area, observing as you go. Make sure you let the ward manager know that you are on
the ward and who you are.
Walk approximately 15 steps into the ward. All wards are different, sometimes 15 steps might only take you half
way down an entrance corridor. This will provide useful information, but keep walking! The point is to get to the
main public area of the ward. Stand quietly for a few minutes and have a good look around taking in what you
notice from your different senses. What you smell and hear can be as important as what you see. Try not to get
caught up in the detail of the toolkit at this point, really focus on your first impressions.
Once you have absorbed information quietly and independently, spend some time looking closely at the details.
Look at the notice boards, the information on cupboard doors, any equipment that is stored in spaces open to
public view. What do you notice about the activities of staff and patients going on around you?
Be courteous and do not intrude, but observe how people interact.
Each of the following sections follows the same format. There are some questions, suggestions and images to
prompt your thinking. These are not designed to be used as a checklist or clipboard exercise but to help you to
structure your observations of some of the quality indicators that you may have subconsciously noticed.
You may wish to have short conversations with staff and patients if this has been agreed in advance with your 15
Steps Challenge team.
Beware of assumptions as you do your walkarounds. For example, the flustered person at the reception desk
might not be the receptionist, but someone who is covering for five minutes while the usual receptionist is away
from the desk. If in doubt, ask.
14. 14
Often there are particular areas and times (for example protected mealtimes) that
are not visible to the 15 Steps Challenge team, however, there is usually
information about these areas and times; poster information, pictures and
checklists on cupboards. These will all contribute to your sense of how the ward
operates.
This toolkit is designed to help identify indicators of the quality of care in a ward
environment. It gives examples to look out for and should prompt discussions
that explore how care is being delivered. It is important to note that care settings
will vary to meet the needs of the patients in that particular environment.
Do not forget to record your positive impressions as well as areas that could be
improved. Let the ward manager know when you are leaving the ward and if
you have seen some particularly good practice, let them know straight away.
15. 15
4. The 15 Steps Challenge –
what to look out for...
a) Welcoming
• Using my senses – what can I hear, smell, see, feel,
touch?
• How does this ward make me feel?
• What is the atmosphere like?
• What interactions are there between
staff/patients/visitors?
• Is there visible information that is useful and re-assuring?
What is it?
• What have I noticed that builds my confidence and trust?
• What makes me less confident?
Things to look out for
• Welcoming reception area
• Welcome signs (including different languages)
• Acknowledgement on arrival – eye contact, smiles, a
greeting
• Information available, clear and visible
• Contact information for relatives and visitors is visible
• Visiting times are evident
• Information about who the staff team are and who the
ward manager is
• Is there information about what the uniforms mean?
• Is there evidence that the ward is accessible to those with
disabilities?
Questions to ask yourself Comments:
Visit undertaken on ............................... (date) by .......................................... (names of Challenge team)
This section is not a checklist but will help structure your observation. It may be useful to detach this section
and take it on your walkaround (or you can download just this section from
www.institute.nhs.uk/productives/15StepsChallenge)
!
16. 16
Visit undertaken on ............................... (date) by .......................................... (names of Challenge team)
b) Safe
• What do I notice about safety issues?
• Does this ward appear to think that safety is important?
• What information tells me about the quality of care
here?
• What tells me that staff are concerned about safety and
preventing harm (e.g infections, falls)?
• How are medicines managed on the ward?
• What have I noticed that builds my confidence?
• What makes me less confident?
Things to look out for
• A clean environment
• Hand gels are available and used
• Clear information about infection control
• Rubbish/dirty items and linen are disposed of
appropriately and not visible
• Patients and staff have identification bracelets/badges
• Patients have access to call bells, drinks, side tables, and
walking aides they might have
• Can I see information that says the ward is improving in
identified areas? Is the information clear and
understandable?
• Equipment and environment appears to be well
maintained
• Protected times/areas for staff to manage drugs and
essential equipment
• Mealtimes might be protected on some wards to ensure
patients are not interrupted while eating
• Security and fire procedures are evident
Questions to ask yourself Comments:
!
17. 17
!
Visit undertaken on ............................... (date) by .......................................... (names of Challenge team)
c) Caring and involving
• What behaviours can I see that do or do not inspire
confidence?
• How have the staff made me feel?
• What can I understand about patient experience on this
ward?
• Are there any indicators that patients and carers are
involved in their own care?
• How is dignity and privacy being respected?
• How are staff interacting with patients (are lower voice
tones used for private conversations)?
• Can I observe good team working taking place?
• Is the routine of the ward evident to patients (e.g, when
ward rounds happen, mealtimes, drinks, when the
League of Friends trolley comes around
Things to look out for
• Staff are with patients
• Patient feedback is displayed
• Curtains are long enough, close fully and are used
• Patients are dressed to protect their dignity
• Information is available for patients and carers in a clear
and user friendly format
• Information is seen that empowers patients (e.g, they can
wear their own clothes, choose their meals)
• Signs that equality and diversity needs are being met
• Visitors have access to chairs and space to visit
• Information about how to complain and compliment is
visible
Questions to ask yourself Comments:
18. 18
Visit undertaken on ............................... (date) by .......................................... (names of Challenge team)
d) Well organised and calm
• Does the ward feel calm or chaotic (even if it is busy)?
• Is essential information about each patient clearly visible
(even where names are anonymised)?
• Is there evidence that equipment is stored in particular
places and where it should be
• Are there doors open to other rooms? (e.g, stock/linen
cupboard, staff room or kitchen)? Do they look well
organised, clean and uncluttered?
Things to look out for
• An uncluttered, clean environment, including nurses’
station, hallways, bays and visitor areas
• Clear signage to rooms, WCs etc.
• Well maintained, appropriate (e.g, non-slip) and clean
condition of walls, floors, windows and ceiling
• Staff have easy access to patient information that is
visible and organised. There is a transparent and
communal information board. (Patient Status at a Glance
board).
• Patient boards show evidence of co-ordination between
different departments
• Equipment stored tidily and managed e.g, colour-coded,
staff return equipment after use, stock cupboards are
clearly labelled – including visible management (photos
of content)
Questions to ask yourself Comments:
!
19. 19
!
Visit undertaken on ............................... (date) by .......................................... (names of Challenge team)
Your local priorities
Use this section to highlight things that are important to your own organisation:
(agree these with the 15 Steps Challenge team in advance)
Remember to ask questions about how this priority made
you feel, what your senses can tell you from first
impressions, what behaviours and interactions are linked.
Things to look out for
(What would patients, relatives and visitors notice about
this priority from their first impression?)
Questions to ask yourself Comments:
20. 20
The template below might be useful to record the overall comments of the 15 Steps team:
15 Steps Challenge
The Reviewers:
Patient
Non Executive Director
Staff
Ward area: Date:
Welcoming:
Safe:
Positives Recommendations
Positives Recommendations
Positives Recommendations
Positives Recommendations
Overall themes and comments:
Caring and involving:
Well organised and calm:
With thanks to First Community Health & Care C.I.C.
15 Steps
Challenge
Quality
from
a patient’s pers
pective
21. 21
5. Reporting back
After the walkaround, you will need to sit down with your 15 Steps Challenge team colleagues and compare
thoughts and comments. It is best to do this straight after the walkaround while the visit and impressions are still
fresh. 15 Steps Challenge team colleagues will have undertaken different roles and focused on different aspects
of care during the walkaround.
Take some time to discuss what each person saw, felt and experienced. Team members will have noticed both
similar and different things. Find a balanced view across the varied perspectives. As a team, it is important to
discuss and note down the aspects of care that helped to build confidence. This needs to be fed back to the
trust in order to share and encourage the spread of good practice. It is also important to note where things could
be changed to improve the patient experience.
As a team, agree the following key points:
• what specific things will be fed back to the ward team – these are the details relating to that particular
environment
• what themes across all of your walkarounds will you feedback to the trust’s sponsor – these are broader issues
that have a more strategic link. For example is there a need for better corporate signage, or information
boards displaying uniform definitions? Is there a need to look in more depth at patient experience across the
trust?
Arrange to meet with the ward leader and the trust sponsor and discuss your findings from the 15 Steps
Challenge with them.
The template on page 20 is a useful form to summarise your feedback.
“As nurses it is our job to inspire confidence and make patients feel
safe and cared for - the beauty of the 15 steps tool is that it provides
a framework to quickly identify what patients and relatives will
perceive and help you understand if you are achieving that.”
Deputy Chief Nurse, Isle of Wight NHS Trust
Constructive feedback is a skill
Rapid feedback to the ward team (on the same day) is really important. Remember, they have been under
scrutiny from the 15 Steps Challenge team and this may make everyone anxious. Make sure that the ward
leader hears the team’s comments as soon as possible. Give feedback verbally and agree if further written
information would be helpful. Identify someone in the 15 Steps Challenge team who will give the feedback,
and ensure that they have the skills for delivering constructive comments.
Remember the rules of giving good feedback:
• Be timely
• Be constructive
• Be courteous
22. 22
Some useful tips for giving feedback:
1. Avoid delays - delays in feeding back can result in reduced momentum and power of the
recommendations.
2. Ensure the facts are right before you give feedback.
3. Plan in advance how you are going to give feedback – who will do this from the 15 Steps Challenge
team?
4. Identify appropriate methods for giving feedback – will this be done verbally, or would it also be
useful to have some written information?
5. Encourage staff to feel part of the process in advance so that it doesn’t feel like a “them and us”
situation.
6. Encourage the recipients of feedback to undertake their own self-assessment before giving feedback
from patient stories e.g. “What do you think patients are saying specifically about how they
experience our service?”
7. Provide non-judgemental feedback which is truthful, direct and constructive.
8. In feeding back, offer some positive examples, followed by some recommendations for improvement
and end with some positives. This is a constructive way to deliver feedback.
9. Enable recipients of your feedback to give you feedback on how they found the process and help
you to understand how it could be more effective.
10. Ensure that there is an opportunity for staff to action plan based on feedback and have ways to
share good practice.
“[We saw] how The Productive Series has been implemented and the
positive effects it has on the ward for both patients and staff. Action
plans were drawn up within a week of our visits, asking for our
feedback and clearly stating what will be done, by who and when.”
Patient Representive, Cambridgeshire LINk
23. 23
6. Developing actions and next steps
Having identified what is working well, and what can be improved, it is
important to make sure that sharing good practice and improvements
actually happen.
“This exercise allows staff to 'step outside the
box' and whilst achieving subjective appraisal of
another area of the hospital, the ensuing effect
is consideration of how your own area is
perceived by patient and visitors. Equally,
methods of practice that are highly successful
could be shared. By considering first impressions, the team members
were able to constructively evaluate the department/ward using a
patient centred approach”
Patient Experience Officer, Isle of Wight NHS Trust
Success!
1. Discuss the Challenge outcome with the ward leader, trust sponsor and other relevant staff (for
example the estates department, Productive Ward lead, quality improvement lead or the patient
experience lead). Feeding back specific details to the ward and key themes to the trust sponsor will
help to make sure that the right actions are owned by the right people.
2. Agree on the actions at a ward level and themes for action at a trust wide level.
3. Record what the action is, who is taking these forward and by when.
4. Identify and celebrate the positives – agree what actions need to happen to do this. It is essential
for sharing good practice.
5. Be clever about tracking your actions – you may wish to develop an action plan specifically for
the 15 Steps Challenge (a template is provided in Appendix 3). However, wards can sometimes be
inundated with action plans for a wide range of initiatives. Can some of the identified actions be
linked to existing action plans, for example training plans or estates maintenance plans? This way
there is an existing process to ensure actions are completed, monitored and reviewed.
6. Review the actions at an agreed date. Revisit the ward walkarounds regularly. Agree to repeat the
15 Steps Challenge within a specific timescale. This will help keep track of the progress and
improvements that are being made within the trust.
24. 24
7. Embedding the 15 Steps Challenge
into regular reviews and continuous
improvement
The 15 Steps Challenge is designed to support continuous improvement. It is not a one-off activity but
should be a regular part of improving the care that you provide. The tool focuses your attention on what
matters to patients. It is useful to think about:
• Repeating the Challenge for different wards, explore the difference between wards that are delivering
different types of care/specialist units – often there are creative ideas that can be shared from one area to
another.
• Visiting wards that are receiving lots of positive patient feedback and wards that have received
complaints – what can be learnt and shared?
• Undertaking ward walkarounds at different times of the day, for example visiting times or evenings.
How does the patient/carer experience change?
• Involving a wide range of patients and carers in the 15 Steps Challenge teams. Ask former patients/carers
if they would like to get involved, some trusts have asked current service users for their input. One idea is
to ask current patients to focus on one area each (e.g. “Welcoming” or “Safe” ) and ask them to apply
the 15 Steps Challenge to their experience.
• Try making the Challenge a part of the PALs and complaints response – where appropriate ask those who
have complained to be part of a 15 Steps team identifying improvements.
• Develop “You Said....We did.....” information boards for ward areas. This helps to inform patients and
visitors of the improvements that are being made and gives real examples of how patients views are
listened to and acted on.
How can we embed this process?
• Develop a pool of 15 Steps Challenge volunteers which include a wide range of staff, patient, carers and
board members. Over time, having a pool of people will reduce the number of briefings that are
required. It will make sure that the visits and time commitment are shared by many people and not just a
few. It also ensures that the pool of “fresh eyes” is enhanced, and different people can undertake review
visits, rather than the same 15 Steps Challenge team repeating their visit.
• Agree a trust approach to regular 15 Steps Challenge walkarounds; what wards will be visited, over what
time interval. Some trusts have decided to visit all of their wards over a year, and then repeating the visits
each year, aiming for year on year improvements. Other organisations have decided to randomly select
wards to visit every two or three months to get a flavour of patients’ views. Other trusts have decided to
add the 15 Steps Challenge to existing activities for example, monthly “Quality Walkarounds”, “Board
to Ward” days, weekly “frontline focus” days, an added dimension to the cycles of PEAT inspections.
• The way in which the 15 Steps Challenge is embedded will be different for each organisation, depending
on processes, structures and opportunities that already exist. The toolkit is designed to be flexible to fit in
with local opportunities.
25. 25
NEED HELP?
• Visit our website at www.institute.nhs.uk/productives/15StepsChallenge Here you will find
additional information within a number of slide sets.
• Contact us via email at productivecare.institute.nhs.uk
• Contact the director of nursing and the Productive programme lead in your trust.
26. 26
Appendix 1
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What is the 15 Steps Challenge?
The 15 Steps Challenge is a tool to help staff, patients and others to work together to identify
improvements that can be made to enhance the patient experience. The Challenge takes place in the
ward environment. A 15 Steps Challenge team, consisting of a patient, a staff member and a board
member, walk onto the ward and take note of their first impressions. The idea is to see the ward through
a patient’s eyes. Does the environment build confidence and trust?
The Challenge tool contains a guide to help the team structure their observations, this is underpinned by
the Care Quality Commission’s essential standards. After the ward walkaround, the 15 Steps Challenge
team feeds back to the ward and senior leaders in the trust. Feedback focuses on good practice to share,
and areas for improvement. The Challenge is repeated on a regular basis, to cover all ward areas and to
ensure that improvements are being progressed. It can:
• be used to help trusts to hear how patients view their wards and care, bringing a stronger patient
voice into the care that we provide
• identify areas for improvement from a patient perspective will support better patient experience
• identify issues in advance of CQC and PEAT inspections
• support the sustainability of The Productive Ward: Releasing time to care™
• support continuous improvement.
Remember, The Challenge is not an audit nor is it designed as a performance management tool.
2. How do I prepare for the 15 Steps Challenge?
• Be clear about the 15 Steps Challenge and what you hope to achieve
Read through the 15 Steps Challenge document and familiarise yourself with what the Challenge is
and how it works. Understanding the detail of the Challenge will bring ideas around how it fits with
the current processes and strategic priorities of your organisation, what outcomes it will bring to your
trust and who might be involved.
• Identify which trust priorities this fits with
There will be similarities and differences across trusts. Think about how you hope to use this to
enhance quality of patient care. Are you looking to improve patient satisfaction scores? Are you
implementing The Productive Ward programme? Are you about to have a PEAT inspection or CQC
visit? Make a quick list of key issues that the Challenge links to.
• Identify the Trust Sponsor
The 15 Steps Challenge needs to have executive awareness and support within the trust. Evidence
tells us that engaged senior leadership is key to successful and sustainable approaches to continuous
improvement. The role of the trust sponsor (most commonly the director of nursing) is to ensure that
the 15 Steps Challenge has a clear strategic fit with quality improvement initiatives, and that the
Challenge is aligned with quality, safety and patient engagement work.
If you are the trust sponsor – have you ensured that your executive team is aware of the programme,
and that you have Board support?
If you are the project co-ordinator – have you ensured that you have a named trust sponsor for this
Challenge?
27. 27
• Prepare your project co-ordinator
Your project co-ordinator might be the Productive Ward lead, a ward sister or matron, the patient
experience lead or others. They need to be well briefed about the Challenge and will need a small
amount of time to set up and implement the Challenge. They will need to recruit and brief 15 Steps
Challenge team members, ensure that the logistics of the walkaround (e.g. visitor passes, agreed
dates and times) are dealt with and that feedback is collated and passed to the ward lead and trust
sponsor. The project co-ordinator may also wish to be part of the 15 Steps Challenge team.
• Prepare the staff team/s
Both the trust sponsor and the project co-ordinator have a role in raising awareness and preparing
staff team/s about the Challenge. It is important that staff in the trust know that the 15 Steps
Challenge tool is happening and that it is about improvement not performance management. The
patient’s perspective will bring valuable learning for everyone. It is also important to prime wards
teams and let them know the Challenge team might visit them, but also important not to be specific
about which wards so that the walkaround remains unannounced.
• Identify a board member to work with on the Challenge
The Board to Ward involvement in the Challenge team is important. It will create strong Board
ownership of the Challenge. There has been extremely positive feedback from non-executive directors
and governors about this toolkit.
• Engage your Patient Experience/Participation and Involvement lead
The Challenge focuses on patients’ experience. It is important to involve the lead for patient
engagement and experience in your trust and align the Challenge with other patient engagement
and experience work. The lead will also help to identify patients and carers that can participate in the
Challenge Team.
• Get going on the Challenge
Follow the Challenge guidelines and toolkit. Use the online slide sets with further tips and
information to help you prepare and deliver the Challenge
www.institute.nhs.uk/productives/15StepsChallenge. Record comments and impressions from the
ward walkarounds and feed these back to the ward team and trust sponsor. There is a template to
help you do this in Appendix 3 of the toolkit.
• Making improvement happen
Moving from feedback to action is key to creating better care for patients. Develop an action plan
that focuses on specific detailed improvements or good practice to share that the ward team can act
on. Also ensure that themes and actions that require wider organisational input are discussed with
the trust sponsor. It is useful to get these wider actions aligned with and informing existing strategic
plans. Aligning actions in this way makes better use of resources and uses existing monitoring and
governance processes. Make sure each action plan specifies what the action is, who will do it and by
when. Ensure that there is a review process so that you can see when action is completed.
28. 28
3. How can I embed the 15 Steps Challenge so that it happens on a regular basis?
It is important that the 15 Steps Challenge becomes part of a continuous improvement and learning
process. Seeing through fresh eyes and hearing from patients and carers on a regular basis is essential for
improving the patient experience. Agree an approach to embed the Challenge with your trust sponsor.
One approach is to seek to visit every ward within a fixed time period and then repeat this over time.
An alternative approach is to visit different wards and areas randomly, at different times; this helps to get
a real sense of what patients and carers are experiencing at any given time in different parts of your
organisation.
In order to embed the 15 Steps Challenge, it is useful to develop a pool of volunteers to take part in the
walkarounds. This shares the time commitment across a larger number of people, and because they are
familiar with the principles and format of the Challenge, it reduces the requirement for in-depth briefing.
It is useful to develop the pool of volunteers from a wide range of clinical and non-clinical staff, non-
executive directors and board members, governor members, the patient councils and forums, your Local
Involvement Networks (LINks), former patients.
For further information, please contact productive.care@institute.nhs.uk or visit
www.institute.nhs.uk/productives/15StepsChallenge
29. 29
Appendix 2 Template for a useful ward notice for staff and patients
VISITORS, STAFF AND PATIENTS
– WE NEED YOUR HELP!
“I can tell what kind of care my daughter
is going to get within 15
steps of walking on to a ward”
quote from parent
The 15 Steps Challenge
What did you think when you first arrived
on this ward?
We know that there are lots of important elements to excellent care, and we believe
that first impressions count. A good first impression builds confidence and
reassurance. We want to get this right for patients and carers.
To help us do this we are working on our 15 Steps Challenge. This means that we
are working with groups of patient representatives and others to help us identify
what works well and what can be improved on our ward. You may see this group
visiting our ward. Please feel free to talk to them about your experience and ideas.
If you have comments and ideas, you could also talk to
on our ward, who can make sure that your
feedback is added into our 15 Steps Challenge.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR HELP
30. 30
Appendix 3 Action Plan template
15 Steps Challenge Action Plan
Action required Strategic link Who will do By Where will it be
this? when? reported?
15 Steps
Challenge
Quality
from
a patient’s pers
pective
Date: Completed by:
WELCOMING:
Action required Strategic link Who will do By Where will it be
this? when? reported?
SAFE:
Action required Strategic link Who will do By Where will it be
this? when? reported?
CARING AND INVOLVING:
Action required Strategic link Who will do By Where will it be
this? when? reported?
WELL ORGANISED AND CALM:
31. 31
Appendix 4 Links to useful resources
The following web address are links to useful material and resources that might help when it comes to
thinking about ideas for improvement.
• The Productive Ward information, tools and case studies:
http://www.institute.nhs.uk/productiveward
• Exploring patient experience; research outlining “What matters to patients”, tools and ideas
for transforming patient experience, further reading and information.
http://www.institute.nhs.uk/patient_experience/guide/home_page.html
http://www.institute.nhs.uk/patient_experience/guide/the_patient_experience_research.html
http://www.institute.nhs.uk/quality_and_value/experienced_based_design/the_ebd_approach_
(experience_based_design).html
http://www.pickereurope.org/pickerapproach
http://www.pickereurope.org/Filestore/Press_releases/2010/Invest_in_Engagement_news_release_
from_Picker_Institute_Europe.pdf
• Improving practice – using observation techniques, improving environments, addressing
safety and quality
http://www.fons.org/library/journal.aspx
http://www.nhsemployers.org/PlanningYourWorkforce/Nursing/toolsandresources/
Highimpactactionsfornursingandmidwifery/Pages/Background.aspx
http://www.harmfreecare.org/
http://www.kingsfund.org.uk/current_projects/enhancing_the_healing_environment/ehe_design.html
• Aiming for high standards of care
http://www.cqc.org.uk/standards
http://www.rcn.org.uk/development/practice/principles
32. Acknowledgements
The 15 Steps Challenge was developed in co-production with many stakeholders who support the NHS to
improve the quality of patient care. We would like to thank all those who have helped develop the 15
Steps Challenge. Patients, carers, volunteers and staff too numerous to mention individually, but whose
insight and expertise has been invaluable. Thanks also to colleagues from the Care Quality Commission,
Royal College of Nursing, the National Association of LINks Members Association and numerous local LINks
groups, the Patients Association, the Foundation Trust Governors Association and NHS South.
We would like to particularly thank those organisations who have volunteered their time, enthusiasm and
fresh eyes for the pilot testing of the 15 Steps Challenge tool.
Portsmouth Hospital NHS Trust
Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust
Isle of Wight NHS Trust
Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust
Berkshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
Hampshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust
East Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust
Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust
Western Sussex Hospitals NHS Trust
Ashford & St. Peters Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Papworth Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
NHS Hertfordshire
Medway NHS Foundation Trust
Royal Surrey County Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
First Community Health and Care C.I.C.
West Hertfordshire Hospitals NHS Trust
Surrey Community Health
The Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust
Maidstone & Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust
Bedford Hospital NHS Trust
Birmingham Children's Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
St George’s Healthcare NHS Trust
University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust
Hinchingbrooke Health Care NHS Trust
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