‘Happy Patients, Happy Staff’, & Fewer Falls: The Meaning of the Meaningful Activity Team

Poster ID
2409 PPE
Authors' names
Katriona Hutchison, John Hodge, Anthony Bishop, Sarah Keir
Author's provenances
1-2. Department of General Medicine, Western General Hospital; 3-4. Department of Medicine of the Elderly, Western General Hospital

Abstract

Introduction

Physical and cognitive frailty combined with unfamiliar surroundings in hospitals puts elderly patients at high risk of falls. It has been demonstrated that patient-centred, non-clinical stimulating activities in hospital have been found to reduce agitation, improve affect and engagement, relieve pressure on nursing staff and reduce falls. In the Medicine of the Elderly (MOE) wards of an urban teaching hospital, after a successful pilot, a Meaningful Activity Team (MAT) was implemented. The effect of this change to patient and staff well-being was assessed, as was the frequency of falls on the wards.

Methods

The MAT was implemented by July 2023. In November 2023, questionnaires were distributed to staff across the MOE department to collect quantitative (Likert scales) and qualitative data on potential benefits and limitations. As part of our Quality Programme, prevalence of patients admitted to MOE wards with a diagnosis of dementia/delirium is regularly measured, as are patient falls, which are recorded via DATIX and collated on ward-based run charts. We interrogated these charts for any significant changes.

Results

The current prevalence of patients with delirium/dementia across the MOE 152 bed footprint is 69%. 49 staff questionnaires were completed, 47 of which had comments. 100% of respondents agreed or strongly agreed that the MAT benefited patient well-being. 87.8% agreed or strongly agreed that the MAT benefited staff well-being (figures 1, 2). Common themes regarding patient well-being were patients being happier, brighter and more sociable. Common themes regarding staff well-being included less stress and increased time for clinical tasks. The frequency of falls has reduced with some wards seeing maintained shifts in median number.

Conclusion

Implementation of the MAT across our MOE wards has improved patient and staff well-being. Reductions noted in frequency of falls have been maintained.

Comments

Thanks for sharing - what kind of activities did you use? who were the staff that coordinated /facilitated these activities?

thanks

Submitted by Mrs Ruth Bryant on

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Who is in your team, how many wards are supported and how, and how do you plan the activities?

Love the sound of this and like that you've considered staff as well as patient outcomes.

Submitted by Professor IE … on

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