An Interprofessional, Multimodal, Family-Centered Quality Improvement Project for Sleep Safety of Hospitalized Infants

Author:

Erlick Mariah1ORCID,Fioravanti Irene Dutko23ORCID,Yaeger Jeffrey4,Studwell Spencer5,Schriefer Jan67

Affiliation:

1. University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, NY, USA

2. Golisano Children’s Hospital, Rochester, NY, USA

3. University of Rochester School of Nursing, NY, USA

4. Division of Pediatric Hospital Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of Rochester Medical Center, NY, USA

5. Department of Risk Management, University of Rochester Medical Center, NY, USA

6. Division of Pediatric Hospital Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, NY, USA

7. Golisano Children’s Hospital at University of Rochester Medical Center, NY, USA

Abstract

The American Academy of Pediatrics published expanded guidelines for infant safe sleep in 2011, expanding the definition from “back to sleep” to “safe to sleep,” more fully describing risk factors and guidelines. In 2016, the guidelines were revised to promote “providers modeling safe sleep behavior” to the highest level of recommendation. Previous studies have addressed the difficulty in creating clear, consistent communication between health care providers and families during an infant’s inpatient stay. This institutional update describes an interprofessional and family-centered quality improvement project to improve sleep safety for hospitalized infants through a multimodal approach. Five family-centered interventions were designed: a designated safe sleep web page, a clear bedside guide to safe sleep, additional training for nursing staff in motivational interviewing, a Kamishibai card audit system, and electronic health record smart phrases. These coordinated interventions reflect advantages of an interprofessional and family-centered approach: building rapport and achieving improvements to infant sleep safety.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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