Abstract
Background: Despite decades of intensive resource allocation to eliminate preventable harm and increase high reliability in the hospital, the prevalence of serious harm remains consistent.
Local Problem: A hospital reduced targeted preventable harms using audit and feedback (A&F) but failed to globally reduce harm or increase proactive awareness. Nurse leaders lacked a defined process for identifying errors, mitigating risk, and teaching systems thinking to influence resiliency among teams.
Methods: Nurse leaders underwent A&F of daily safety rounds. Adherence data on frequency, high-quality, and high-reliability organizational (HRO) leader practice standards and precursor incident reporting rates were trended.
Results: Rounding practice adherence increased for the following defined standards: frequency (63%-79%); high quality (50%-90%); and HRO leadership (0%-67%). Precursor incident reporting rates increased 25%.
Conclusions: A&F reinforced quality and accountability for daily safety rounds. HRO theory-guided feedback offered an innovative way to translate HRO influence into nurse leader practice.