Research Department. CORE Did the comparison of your state data to the aggregate data of other...

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Research Department

CORE

Did the comparison of your state data to the aggregate data of other boards allow for meaningful comparisons for where the agency may improve?

Survey Question

Critical to know how close or far the agency is in comparison to similar boards

The numbers showed where significant process reviews/changes/decisions need to be made.

Advantages

Want more meaningful comparisons

• Reliability of some data (e.g., financial data, low response rates) questionable

Improvements

What decisions or changes have you made, if any, based on your CORE report?

Survey Question

Review and develop the outcome measures in the Board Strategic Plan

Used comparative data to change/support an increase in the licensing fee structure

Used the data to make changes in the phone system; purchased new reporting system to measure phone outcomes.

Uses

Developed a consultative approach to assisting the nursing education programs comply with the rules and prepare for approval surveys

Used the comparison information to develop practice statements

Used the Core Survey to create a tracking system for gathering discipline data.

Uses

What are the critical programs or services that most affect the quality and costs of your regulatory operations that you like to receive best practice information on?

Survey Question

Alternative programs disciplinary processes

Background checks and international nursing applicants requirements

Disciplinary process

Licensure process

Investigative best practices

Hearing department best practices

Best Practices?

Summary of State data

Continue to refine and narrow the focus of the survey instrument

Revise tool to assure that data is being collected consistently

Areas of Improvement

2010 CORE Survey

1st Quarter 2010

New and improved

Shorter

Terms defined

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

900 YourState

Aggregate

CORE HelpsIdentify Potential Problem Areas

Tangible Evidence: Improve Productivity & Efficiency

Expense Calculation Per Licensee

($20.00)

($10.00)

$0.00

$10.00

$20.00

$30.00

$40.00

$50.00

$60.00

2002 2005 2007

$48.80

$38.91

<$9.89>

Aggregate

My State

Variance

Tangible Benefit: Licensing Staff Improved Productivity & Efficiency

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

2005All

2005State

2007All

2007State

VerificationTimeliness%Web LicensureVerif.

Verification Cycle Time Improved 57% 2007

INCORPORATING CORE FINDINGS INTO STRATEGIC PLANNING

GOAL: TO FACILITATE INFORMATION EXCHANGE BETWEEN THE BOARD AND ITS CONSTITUENTS

Objective: Effective communication with the public, including licensees, employers, policy makers, consumers

Performance Measure: CORE findings indicate positive communications with constituents

Simulation

Simulation

Help regulators determine when and how to use simulation in pre-licensure nursing education.  

In other words, how much simulation is enough and in what situations?

Clinical

OnlySimulation

OnlyClinical + Simulation

Knowledge

Confidence

Clinical Outcomes

Potential Study Participants

• Major Simulation Labs Across the Country

• Issues Regarding Sample Criteria

Practice and Professional Issues (PPI)

Employer Survey

Employer Survey

The employer survey is designed to provide insights into the professional and practice issues of nurses in practice settings. The data collected will provide insights into the following:

1.The nursing workforce (i.e., nurse vacancies, recruitment, hiring, and retention);

2.Educational preparation (i.e., clinical education, nursing program preferences, degree preference, and general preparation to

practice);

3.Transitioning and professional development, questions related to transition and training newly-hired nurses.

4.Patient safety (i.e., licensure, errors, discipline, shift length/scheduling, communication, organizational characteristics,

and role clarity.

Questions

To what extent is there an inadequate supply of nurses? And what negative consequences, if any, have facilities experienced as a result of an inadequate supply of nurses?

Do facilities prefer not to hire newly-licensed nurses and if so why?

How important is clinical experience?

Are most of the nurses hired by facilities prepared (prior to hire) to provide safe, effective care to clients?

What are the types and lengths of transition programs offered to newly-licensed, experienced, and foreign-educated nurses?

Are facilities providing medication safety, patient safety, and simulation training and development for nurses?

Questions

APRN

APRN

Compare patient outcomes for Nurse Practitioners (NP) based on their degree of physician supervision:

1. Those who have on-site physician supervision2. Those with professional collaboration 3. Those who collaborate with agreed upon protocols or delegation 4. No physician involvement whatsoever

An Assessment of the Safety, Quality, and Effectiveness of Care Provided by

Advanced Practice Nurses

A sweeping review of the scientific literature on the quality, safety, and effectiveness of care provided by APRNs

Geo Mapping

Geo-mapping shows the locations of every actively practicing physician in all 50 states and non-physician providers.

Some believe these maps invalidate the argument that expanding the scope of practice of non-physician providers will enable increased access to care for rural patients, demonstrating that physicians and non-physicians are equally accessible in metropolitan and rural areas.

Information for legislators

Member Board Profiles

1.Updates

2. Index

3.Revised format

TERCAP

Sufficient attention must be given to analyzing and understanding the causes of errors in order to create learning systems and improve patient safety. 

TERCAP examines adverse events to understand where the system broke down, why the incident occurred, and the circumstances surrounding the incident.

Analyzing critical incidents, whether or not the event actually leads to a bad outcome, provides an understanding of the conditions that produced an actual error or the risk of error as well as the contributing factors.

Why TERCAP?

TERCAP Research QuestionsWhat factors are associated with practice breakdown?

Patient characteristics

Nurse characteristics (demographic data)

Nurse practice history factors (scheduling, staffing levels and/or timing of incidents)

Licensure types

Educational characteristics

Setting factors

Healthcare system factors

Healthcare team factors

Clusters of practice breakdown associated with the primary types of error

Types of practice breakdown associated with patient outcome

Types of patient medical record documentation associated with different types of practice breakdown

From Questions to Findings

Work Times

Medication errors occur more often between midnight and 7am

Types of patient

medical record

documentation

More than seventy percent of the practice breakdown occurs with a paper medication record system

Types of healthcare system factors

Frequent interruptions or distractions lead to documentation errors

Years of Experience at Time of Disciplinary Action

Avg. = 14 years

Length of Time Frequency Percent

One month – Twelve months

122 32.11

One - Two years 73 19.21

More than five years 72 18.95

Three - Five years 54 14.21

Two - Three years 31 8.16

Less than one month 15 3.95

Unknown 13 3.42

Length of Time Worked for Organization Where Practice Breakdown Occurred

Gender

6

17

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18

Percent

Percent ofDisciplined

Nurses Who AreMale

Percent of Malesin Nurse

Population

6

18

Type of License

7761

23

38

6 10

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

RN LPN/VN APRN

Population

TERCAP

Per

cent

Highest Degree Frequency Percent

Associate RN 128 33%

PN/VN 116 30%

Associate LPN 27 7%

Diploma RN 17 4%

BA 2 1%

Other degree 2 1%

Total 292 76%

Education

Erroneous Conclusions

37% of nurses with criminal convictions committed medication errors

Margin of Error = + 35%

Range = 2.5% to 72.5%

Medication Aides

Medication Aides

Dozens of studies have confirmed that the rate of administration error is low and seems to average about 10% for medication aides as well as RNs.

Expert Panel

Amy Vogelsmeier PhD, RN, Assistant Professor, Coordinator for Leadership in Nursing and Health-Care Systems John A. Hartford Geriatric Nursing Scholar, Sinclair School of Nursing University of Missouri.

Glenise McKenzie, RN, PhD, Assistant Professor, Rural Health Research Office, Oregon Health and Scieences University School of Nursing

Jill Scott-Cawiezell PhD RN FAAN, Professor and Area Chair for Systems and Practice, University of Iowa College of Nursing

Suzanne K. Sikma PhD, RN, Professor, Nursing Program, University of Washington

Ginette A. Pepper PhD, RN, FAAN, Director, Hartford Center of Geriatric Nursing Excellence, Professor & Helen Bamberger Colby Endowed Chair, Associate Dean for Research & PhD Programs, University of Utah College of Nursing

Medication Aides

Who regulates medication aides What medication aides can and

cannot do Training Supervision Where they work

Gather information on:

Meta Analysis

Combines the results of several studies that address a set of related research hypotheses

Medication Aides

Workforce

Boards of

Nursing

Nursing

Workforce

CentersSam

ple

Surve

y

NCSBN will collect data from states who renew licenses on-line

State Boards of Nursing On-line License

Renewal

NCSBN’s WorkforceDatabase

Analyze Data at the National Level

Analyze Data at the Regional Level

Analyze Data at the State Level

Umbrella/Independent Boards

Shared Services

Would consolidation, re-structuring or moving regulatory programs reduce program costs?

Would consolidation, re-structuring or moving regulatory programs increase administrative efficiency?

Would consolidation, re-structuring or moving regulatory programs increase their effectiveness?

Would consolidation, re-structuring or moving regulatory programs increase their ability to fulfill their legislative mandates?

Umbrella/Independent Boards

Shared Services

Consolidation focuses on how state’s organize the delivery of services – taking existing organizations, services or applications and combining them into a single operation; typically mandated by executive order or statute.

Shared services focuses on the delivery of a particular service or services in the most efficient and effective way, as a way of gaining economies of scale and other benefits. The centralization of specific activities that function as everyone’s vendor of choice; usually implies voluntary participation involving service level agreements (SLAs).

1. Autonomous boards;

2. Boards are autonomous but with shared administrative functions;

3. Boards that share authority with a centralized agency;

4. Boards with limited authority.

There are not two organizational models but four major organizational models in use nationally.

You don't need to own your own grocery store to control what you eat.

A shared-services organization gives business units absolute control over what they buy from it. You buy, you pay; you don't buy, you don't pay.

Allocations distribute costs among business units after the fact based on a formula that's roughly based on utilization. Allocations do not give business units control of a checkbook, and in fact serve no economic purpose other than cost accounting. Oh, they do one more thing: They get business units upset about "taxation without representation" and put the shared-services organization on the defensive about its costs

Consolidate

E-mail Services

Shared Services

Customer ServiceDecentralize

Investigation

Alternative to Discipline

Alternative to Discipline Programs

Review discipline and alternative programs and provide recommended regulatory practices for chemically dependent licensees

Survey Results

States with Alternative to Discipline Programs

Currently have an alternative to discipline program for licensees with substance abuse disorders.

Frequency Jurisdiction

Yes, have an alternative to discipline program

36

AL, AZ, CA, CO, CT, DC, FL, ID, IL, IN, KS, LA, MA, MN, MT, NC, ND, NH, NJ NM, NV, NY, OH, OK, OR, PA, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VA, VT, WA, WV, WI

No, do not have an alternative to discipline program

15AK, AR, DE, GA, HI, IA, ME, MO, MS, NE, WY, AS, GU, MP, VI

No response 4 KY, MD, MI, RI

Survey Results

Who manages and staffs (administers) the alternative to discipline program

Frequency Percent

Board of Nursing Staff 18 47.37

An outside agency/entity (not another governmental or state agency).

13 34.21

State Agency other than the Board of Nursing 4 10.53

Other 2 5.26

No Response 1 2.63

Whether or not information related to participants in the alternative to discipline program is public information or not?

Whether or not participants in the alternative to discipline program are routinely required to submit to observed random drug screening

Whether or not the nursing employer is notified about the positive confirmed drug screen results of a licensee who tests positive (confirmed positive drug screen results) for an unauthorized drug or alcohol

Whether or not a licensee who tests positive for an unauthorized drug or alcohol is permitted to remain in the alternative to discipline program

Number of drug screens can a licensee can fail (testing positive) before being reported to the Board

Single Clinical Competency Assessment

Programs

Determine whether graduates from single clinical competency programs are able after graduation to practice in a clinical setting at a level substantially equivalent to the graduates of nursing educational programs that require students to complete a required number of supervised clinical learning experiences.

Web Site

www.ncsbn.org

Nursing Research & Data

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