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Hourly rounding helps us meet your needs

  When you are in the hospital, you need extra help getting your basic needs met. That is why there is a button by your bed that you can use to call for a nurse. However, you may not need to push that button very often because of hourly rounding.
Keeping you safe
 

Hourly rounding is when nurses and other hospital staff members work together to check on each patient every hour and address any unmet needs.

This proactive approach is being put into place at all of our hospitals not only because it makes our patients happier; our staff members feel like they're doing a better job helping patients.

What to expect as a hospital patient

Here's what you can expect when you are a patient in a hospital unit with hourly rounding.

  1. Every hour, a hospital staff member will enter your room to see how you are doing. You will be asked questions like these:
    • Are you comfortable?
    • How is your pain?
    • Do you need to use the bathroom?
    • Do you need us to move the phone, call light, trashcan, water pitcher or over-bed table within reach?
  2. The staff member will meet your need according to how you answer his or her questions.

Safety Advice for Hospital Stays

How is Allina doing?

Percent of patients who reported that their nurse always and usually listened to them.

Allina - all hospitals

bar graph showing Percent of patients who reported that their nurse always and usually listened to them.
Allina - all hospitals

Abbott Northwestern Hospital

Buffalo Hospital

Cambridge Medical Center

Mercy Hospital

New Ulm Medical Center

Owatonna Hospital

Phillips Eye Institute

River Falls Area Hospital

St. Francis Regional Medical Center

United Hospital

Unity Hospital

 

From nurse to patient: Hourly rounding from both sides of the bed

Fern Sederberg stands in a hospital room. She's wearing a jean jacket and have short, blonde hair.

Fern Sederberg, RN, is a big believer in hourly rounding, having experienced it both as both a nurse and a patient.

When hourly rounding was first implemented at Mercy Hospital, Fern Sederberg, RN, saw the results right away. "It really works," she says. "Before I started hourly rounding, I was getting a dozen or more call lights every shift. Now it's as low as one or two."

Fewer call lights mean more focused, productive work time for nurses, with fewer interruptions.

"I think it directly improves the quality of care we provide," said Sederberg. "We're more systematic about making sure all our patients' needs are met."

On June 14, 2007, Sederberg came to Mercy Hospital as a patient. She needed an emergency appendectomy and asked to be admitted to her own unit, 2-East. "I just knew I'd be comfortable there, because I knew everybody," she says.

As it turned out, she was even more comfortable than she anticipated, in part because of hourly rounding.

"I really gained a new appreciation of the process by seeing it from the other side of the bed," she says. "I didn't think it would be a big deal when I first went in, but it really does make a difference.

"One aspect I found particularly helpful was when the nurse would ask me if there is anything else I needed. It made me think about things that ordinarily might not occur to me until after the nurse left, like refilling my water glass. Little things like that can make a big difference when you're a patient."

After her experience, Sederberg says she's more of a believer in hourly rounding than ever. "I believe it can have a huge impact on the way patients feel about the hospital and their experience," she says. "I know it did for me."

Return to patient care, safety and satisfaction Patient care, safety and satisfaction


 

Source: Allina Hospitals & Clinics

First published: 08/29/2008
Last updated: 08/29/2008

Reviewed by: Judith Napier, vice president of system safety, Allina Hospitals & Clinics; Penny Wheeler, MD, chief clinical officer, Allina Hospitals & Clinics

 

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