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    AboutPolicies Privacy NoticeBlack Country Healthcare NHS Foundation TrustCoventry and Warwickshire Partnership NHS TrustDudley Group NHS Foundation TrustGeorge Eliot Hospital NHS TrustSandwell and West Birmingham NHS TrustSouth Warwickshire University NHS Foundation TrustUniversity Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation TrustUniversity Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS TrustWalsall Healthcare NHS Trust

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    The feasibility and validity of using a real time location system (RTLS) to measure bedside contact time

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    Author
    Cannaby, Ann-Marie
    Carter, Vanda
    Hoe, Thomas
    Strobel, Stephenson
    Tafti, Elena Ashtari
    Baker, Rephna
    Nash, Clare
    Whatley, Vanessa
    Gray, Richard
    Affiliation
    Sandwell and West Birmingham NHS Trust; Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust; Midwifery La Trobe University
    Publication date
    2021-11-15
    
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Background The association between the nurse-to-patient ratio and patient outcomes has been extensively investigated. Real time location systems have the potential capability of measuring the actual amount of bedside contact patients receive. Aims This study aimed to determine the feasibility and accuracy of real time location systems as a measure of the amount of contact time that nurses spent in the patients’ bed space. Methods An exploratory, observational, feasibility study was designed to compare the accuracy of data collection between manual observation performed by a researcher and real time location systems data capture capability. Four nurses participated in the study, which took place in 2019 on two hospital wards. They were observed by a researcher while carrying out their work activities for a total of 230 minutes. The amount of time the nurses spent in the patients’ bed space was recorded in 10-minute blocks of time and the real time location systems data were extracted for the same nurse at the time of observation. Data were then analysed for the level of agreement between the observed and the real time location systems measured data, descriptively and graphically using a kernel density and a scatter plot. Results The difference (in minutes) between researcher observed and real time location systems measured data for the 23, 10-minute observation blocks ranged from zero (complete agreement) to 5 minutes. The mean difference between the researcher observed and real time location systems time in the patients’ bed space was one minute (10% of the time). On average, real time location systems measured time in the bed space was longer than the researcher observed time. Conclusions There were good levels of agreement between researcher observation and real time location systems data of the time nurses spend at the bedside. This study confirms that it is feasible to use real time location systems as an accurate measure of the amount of time nurses spend at the patients’ bedside.
    Citation
    Cannaby A-M, Carter V, Hoe T, et al. The feasibility and validity of using a real time location system (RTLS) to measure bedside contact time. Journal of Research in Nursing. 2022;27(5):421-433. doi:10.1177/17449871211016169
    Type
    Article
    Handle
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14200/6103
    DOI
    10.1177/17449871211016169
    Publisher
    SAGE Publications
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1177/17449871211016169
    Scopus Count
    Collections
    Research (Articles)

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