The "nursing cheat sheet," a guide to aid nursing in management of patient care

Proc (Bayl Univ Med Cent). 2019 Mar 14;32(2):215-217. doi: 10.1080/08998280.2018.1559389. eCollection 2019 Apr.

Abstract

The aim of this study was to promote nursing and practitioner satisfaction by improving communication and reducing rapid response team (RRT) activations and code blues hospitalwide by implementing the nursing cheat sheet, a list of key steps to be done before calling the primary provider. This prospective observational study took place over a year at a 636-bed teaching hospital in Central Texas. Education regarding the nursing cheat sheet was provided to nurses at monthly meetings, unit huddles, and interdisciplinary rounds. Units received monthly follow-up education and reminders, and the nursing cheat sheet was posted at nursing work areas. RRT activations and code blues were counted daily. After implementing the nursing cheat sheet, RRT activations were lower than the pre-intervention average and were outside the control band for July, August, and November. The number of code blues did not deviate from the control bands. The authors did not see a reduction in code blues after implementation of the nursing cheat sheet, but the average number of RRT activations decreased, indicating a significant difference in the number of RRT activations. It is not clear that this decrease was due to the intervention.

Keywords: Nursing; patient care; rapid response team.