Abstract

BackgroundCOVID-19 has impacted the context in which healthcare staff and teams operate and this has implications for quality improvement (QI) work. Contrary to the usual ambivalent relationship staff have with QI work, there have been examples of unprecedented staff engagement in implementing rapid changes during the pandemic indicating a change in important underlying factors that impact staff involvement in QI. The purpose of this study is to explore staff perspectives about how experience and skills of QI methods supported them in implementing innovative practices during COVID-19.MethodsThis is a qualitative narrative study based on narrative interviews to collect healthcare staff stories of implementing rapid change. The stories were identified through social media (Twitter) and a national health magazine issued by the Irish health service. Twenty staff members participated in the interviews. Interviews were audio recorded, transcribed, and anonymised. A four-step thematic analysis was conducted.ResultsThe analysis revealed the transformational journey of healthcare staff from the initial shock and anxiety caused by COVID-19 to making sense of the situation, implementing rapid changes, and acknowledging COVID as a learning experience. Six themes were evident from the analysis: COVID anxiety and fear, emotional supports and coping mechanisms, person-centric changes, COVID as a ‘forcing function’ for change, a collective way of working and looking back and thinking ahead.ConclusionsWhile most rapid changes during COVID-19 did not represent a systematic and explicit QI application, QI principles were evident throughout the stories and actions taken, including making small changes, testing changes, learning, reflecting as a team, and improving. Many staff members were able to retrospectively identify the relevance of QI principles. COVID-19 eliminated some traditional barriers to change leading to efficient solutions, thus highlighting a need to sustain these positive changes into routine practice to develop an adaptive healthcare system receptive to QI.

Highlights

  • COVID-19 has impacted the context in which healthcare staff and teams operate and this has implications for quality improvement (QI) work

  • The onset of COVID-19 has impacted the context in which healthcare staff and teams operate as it necessitated rapid changes to maintain safe and effective care delivery

  • Six themes emerged from the thematic analysis which were COVID anxiety and fear, emotional supports and coping mechanisms, person-centric changes, COVID as a ‘forcing function’ for change, a collective way of working and looking back and thinking ahead

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Summary

Introduction

COVID-19 has impacted the context in which healthcare staff and teams operate and this has implications for quality improvement (QI) work. QI methodology provides staff with a systematic approach to improve their services and Khurshid et al BMC Health Services Research (2021) 21:1271 outcomes for patients by iteratively testing and measuring change [1]. This seemingly straightforward set of methods is often difficult to translate into action in daily practice. The onset of COVID-19 has impacted the context in which healthcare staff and teams operate as it necessitated rapid changes to maintain safe and effective care delivery. The QI mindset, concepts, and tools are still relevant in the current emergency situation and can allow health systems to learn faster, fail better, and learn safely from small scale improvements [3]

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