BLANKETS: a toasty tool to improve social history documentation for our older patients.
Bronwen E WarnerKate MillarMhairi BollandJackie McNicholasMelanie DaniPublished in: Postgraduate medical journal (2021)
A thorough social history is an important component of all medical clerkings and is particularly crucial when admitting an older patient. Standards exist to guide the social history content but are rarely referenced in practice. This quality improvement project conceived and implemented the novel BLANKETS (Bladder and bowels, Legal arrangements, Activities of daily living, Neurology (cognition), Kit (dentures, hearing or visual aids), EtOH and smoking, Trips, walking aids and exercise tolerance, Setup at home) tool for social history documentation, derived from existing standards, at a specialist medical inpatient hospital setting. Over a 15-week period with two cycles of intervention involving 125 patients in total, there was good staff engagement and overall improvement in social history documentation with 194/403 (48.1%) vs 199/545 (36.5%) criteria met overall and on average 6.3/13 vs 4.7/13 criteria documented for each patient. The social history BLANKETS tool is a memorable acronym to prompt clerking doctors to take a thorough and focused social history which is intrinsic to determining appropriate rehabilitation goals for effective discharge planning and setting appropriate ceiling of care decisions.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- mental health
- quality improvement
- palliative care
- spinal cord injury
- physical activity
- primary care
- newly diagnosed
- multiple sclerosis
- emergency department
- end stage renal disease
- electronic health record
- case report
- prognostic factors
- social media
- ejection fraction
- peritoneal dialysis
- chronic pain
- lower limb
- clinical trial
- white matter
- study protocol
- advance care planning
- smoking cessation
- health insurance