Florida Hospital Tracks Nurses Footsteps, Work Patterns

Florida Hospital Celebration Health improves nurse scheduling, productivity with sensors that track workflows and patterns.

David F Carr, Editor, InformationWeek Government/Healthcare

March 17, 2014

5 Min Read
<b>Heat map visualization shows the location of the greatest traffic within a nursing unit.<br />(Source: Stanley Healthcare)</b>

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A Florida hospital says electronic tracking of nursing personnel is helping it refine their workflow and work habits and lay the groundwork to replace the obsolete "midnight census" method of determining staffing requirements.

Florida Hospital Celebration Health is using Real Time Locating System (RTLS) tags and sensors from Stanley Healthcare, a division of Stanley Black & Decker that provides inventory, security, and safety products for the healthcare industry. Like GPS, RTLS is location tracking technology, but with greater precision for tracking movements within a building rather than across the globe. Stanley's product is based on the 2012 acquisition of AeroScout. The hospital initially signed up with AeroScout for a 2011 pilot of the technology in a 32-bed surgical unit and has been "continually, slowly expanding it" to other units ever since, according to Ashley Simmons, director of performance improvement. This summer, the nurse tracking technology is slated to move into the emergency department.

The Celebration Health hospital in Kissimmee, near Orlando, is part of the Florida Hospital network, which in turn is part of Adventist Healthcare. Celebration Health is also "a flagship for innovation and IT" within the system, Simmons said. After a half-dozen years of using AeroScout technology for asset tracking, as in equipment, the hospital decided to explore how it could be applied to nursing and "the people assets" in within the hospital, she said in an interview.

Nurses, support staff, and a few cooperative doctors wear location tags that attach to their name badges, broadcasting an ultrasound signal that is tracked through sensors in the ceiling. This allows tracking of the movements of the staff on duty, which can be analyzed in a "heat map" view that shows the areas of greatest activity. This makes it possible to pinpoint the location of the most demanding patients and identify tasks that may have been distributed inefficiently across the workforce.

"The goal is to figure out how we can streamline workflow and understand the way we are utilizing staff," Simmons said. While the Big Brother implications of this monitoring bothered some nurses, over time they grew to trust assurances that the system would not be used in a "punitive" way, Simmons said.

"They were told they did not have to wear it, but if they did it would help us," Chief Nursing Officer Patty Jo Toor said in an interview.

The staff movement analysis turns out to produce a very different picture of the workload on a nursing unit than the traditional method of counting how many patients are in hospital beds as of midnight.

"What we see in our units is we're underestimating it -- although that may not be true of every unit of every hospital," Toor said.

While the hospital has not yet progressed to the point of reallocating staff based on the movement sensor analysis, it has found opportunities to redesign inefficient workflows. For example, the patient care technicians responsible for taking used IV pumps to be sterilized had been performing that task at 6 a.m. -- except that they complained there was often too much going on at that time, during the bustle of getting patients ready for discharge, for them to take care of that chore. "We could see that they were not quite so busy between 1 and 3 a.m., so we told them to return the majority of the pumps between 1 and 3, so the job can get done when they're not so busy," Toor said. Maybe someone should have been able to figure that out without the help of a computer system, "but when you're in the middle of it, sometimes you can't see it," she said.

In other cases, a nurse might be assigned to care for two patients at the opposite side of the hallway, and the RTLS visualization dramatizes the time spent racing back and forth, which could be a reason to move one of those patients or juggle assignments. One way Celebration Health won acceptance for the system from nurses was by allowing to see their own data, which they can view through a web portal. "It helped them understand how they could have a better day by the way organized themselves better. You might go home and feel you had a really rough day, but with this you can see I really did have a busy day -- I had these types of patients, and that's why it was so rough," Toor said.

Getting this data on activity in the emergency department will be particularly useful for planning out workflow, Toor said, and making operations there more efficient is a high priority. "I want to see how we're processing patients through the ED because the longer they stay there, the more unhappy they are," she said.

To analyze the data gathered by the location tags, Celebration Health uses software provided by Stanley Healthcare and its partner Tableau Software, but internal IT and analysts also do some additional work with the data. Correlating the movement patterns with data from the hospital's electronic health records system -- which would show who was in the room at the time a nurse visited it -- is so far a manual process, although the longer term goal would be to have the two systems integrated, Simmons said.

"We want to break the patient stay down into touch points, so we can see how many touch points did that patient have with staff during the stay," Simmons said. In the context of the trend toward value-based purchasing of healthcare services, she said, "we want to show what did we do to provide the best value for each patient while they were here."

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About the Author

David F Carr

Editor, InformationWeek Government/Healthcare

David F. Carr oversees InformationWeek's coverage of government and healthcare IT. He previously led coverage of social business and education technologies and continues to contribute in those areas. He is the editor of Social Collaboration for Dummies (Wiley, Oct. 2013) and was the social business track chair for UBM's E2 conference in 2012 and 2013. He is a frequent speaker and panel moderator at industry events. David is a former Technology Editor of Baseline Magazine and Internet World magazine and has freelanced for publications including CIO Magazine, CIO Insight, and Defense Systems. He has also worked as a web consultant and is the author of several WordPress plugins, including Facebook Tab Manager and RSVPMaker. David works from a home office in Coral Springs, Florida. Contact him at [email protected]and follow him at @davidfcarr.

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