Abstract

Healthcare staff are required to undertake mandatory training programs to ensure they maintain key clinical competencies. This study was conducted in a private hospital in Ireland, where the processes for accessing mandatory training were found to be highly complex and non-user friendly, resulting in missed training opportunities, specific training license expiration, and underutilized training slots which resulted in lost time for both the trainers and trainees. A pilot study was undertaken to review the process for accessing mandatory training with a focus on the mandatory training program of Basic Life Support (BLS). This was chosen due to its importance in patient resuscitation and its requirement in the hospital achieving Joint Commission International (JCI) accreditation. A pre- and post-team-based intervention design was used with Lean Six Sigma (LSS) methodology employed to redesign the process of booking, scheduling, and delivery of BLS training leading to staff individual BLS certification for a period of two years. The redesign of the BLS training program resulted in a new blended delivery method, and the initiation of a pilot project led to a 50% increase in the volume of BLS classes and a time saving of 154 h 30 min for staff and 48 h 14 min for BLS instructors. The success of the BLS process access pilot has functioned as a platform for the redesign of other mandatory education programs and will be of interest to hospitals with mandatory training requirements that are already facing healthcare challenges and demands on staff time.

Highlights

  • IntroductionA meeting was organized with key stakeholders for the planning of the Basic Life Support (BLS) Heartcode Pilot

  • After the process change the total Basic Life Support (BLS) training time was reduced to 2 h 9 min

  • We identified an issue with staff education and licensing in BLS

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Summary

Introduction

A meeting was organized with key stakeholders for the planning of the BLS Heartcode Pilot This required the commitment of the BLS instructor to deliver the BLM and the team agreed to collate the evaluations. Buy-in was required by senior management to approve the process and a willingness from the education department to deliver the BLS Heartcode pilot. This method was chosen as it allows for a flexible learning environment for staff with the BLM. In 2017 the hospital adopted the LSS methodology for QIPs within the organization which is supported through the onsite education and training academy [2]. The method of delivery at the initiation of this project was a standardized national approach supported by the American Heart Association (AHA) and the Irish Heart Foundation (IHF)

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