You are the nurse manager in the surgical intensive care unit (SICU). At a staff meeting, a nurse named Karen asks, "Why
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You are the nurse manager in the surgical intensive care unit (SICU). At a staff meeting, a nurse named Karen asks, "Why
You are the nurse manager in the surgical intensive care unit (SICU). At a staff meeting, a nurse named Karen asks, "Why do we have limited visiting hours for families? Where I used to work, families were not restricted to when they could visit." She further states that AACN issued a call to expand open visitation in the ICU years ago. Joe, a long-tenured and informal historian on the unit, says, "Well, that's just not how we have done it here because we are a SICU. Our patients are different. Besides, we tried extending our visiting hours once, but it didn't work." Others agree with Joe that changing unit visitation practices would not be good. You ask your team about the evidence on visitation in the SICU Susan, who is in graduate school, says, "evidence is strong for unrestricted visitation for families in general care areas, but I don't know the SICU literature." The team is uncertain but is now interested in learning more. You recognize current unit visitation practices are traditional and an old practice habit that is considered routine and beyond dispute despite evidence for change. You realize this is potentially an evidence-based practice (EBP) project that might improve patient satisfaction or decrease falls on the unit. 1. How will you engage the team in this EBP project? 2. What are the issues for pursuing an evidenced-based, standardized practice for visitation? 3. Who would you consider to be the project director to manage the project, and why? 4. How can you help the team determine whether this is a priority for the organization?
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