Implementing the Synergy Model: A Qualitative Descriptive Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Background of Synergy Model Implementation at Hamilton Health Services
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Reasons for Adopting the Synergy Model
3.1.1. Exploring Staffing Models
The staff had become quite overwhelmed. We had a lot of staff turnover, a lot of absenteeism. There was a strong belief that the patients had changed in their nature of their level of acuity and the effort that it took to care for them. So we needed…we just knew that we needed some kind of a different model.(Unit Leader 1)
3.1.2. Supporting Equitable Workloads
Well, the main reason, in my opinion, was to be able to reflect the workload for the nurse-to-patient ratio-number one. And number two, is to ensure that we have the right nurse caring for the right patient in terms of the skills and competency.(Unit Leader 3)
3.2. Facilitators to the Implementation of the Synergy Model
3.2.1. Having a Dedicated Trusted Nurse Champion
We did have a champion…she was an RN at the bedside. And therefore, I think this was helpful because it made the tool, kind of, you know, more realistic, and the feedback that the RN provides is more relevant to the staff so they can make connections as opposed to being enforced by leadership.(Unit leader 2)
I started integrating it [the Synergy Model] as a discussion point…I asked them about their patient assignment. But at the end, I also asked them to include their synergy scores. So, I started reviewing routinely what synergy scoring is and getting them to start to work through identifying the acuity and capability scores for each of their patients.(Unit leader 3-acting as a nurse champion)
3.2.2. Organizational Support
So, for staff to be able to know that … one of the chiefs of practice, she was one of the practice chiefs at the time…was attached to it as well as the manager. I think that helps quite a bit for buy-in..(Unit Leader 5)
So, she [informatics expert] worked with myself, the unit leader, the educator and our nurse champion to create the corporate tool that would sort of blend the tool we’re using and the corporate tool together and make it meaningful and usable for our team.(Direct Care Nurse 2)
3.2.3. Patient-Centered, Nurse-Driven
…somebody I’m working with changes over the course of the day and becomes unstable, becomes complex, it’s nice to stay with those two patients because you know what you’re doing for the second shift or the third shift with them versus changing it up and having to relearn new people…And so, in times like that, somebody like me who has a bit more experience, is likely to look at that and go, “You know what? They’re all twos [lower acuity] across the board, I’m going to bump that to a three [higher acuity]”.(Direct Care Nurse 8)
3.3. Barriers to Implementation of the Synergy Model
3.3.1. Negative Perceptions of the Model
And the other piece is that I think that staff also felt with the introduction of Synergy that it would also maybe provide them with more staffing resources. So maybe they thought they may have gotten additional personnel, like additional nurses, especially when the patient scores were higher. And it wasn’t really about that. It was about looking at what is our existing resources and how could we look at using what we have to manage the patient care assignment.(Unit Leader 7)
Like sometimes we try to up-staff, especially, as I said, when I have like transplants and lots of chemo and things like that. But if the site is short, like [name of site], like other units are short a few RNs, they will pull from us no matter what. So, then I don’t…like it doesn’t help us then.(Unit Leader 5)
3.3.2. Human Resource Challenges
If we could do that in a perfect world, then you’ll get manpower with the twitch of a finger, it will work great. I do like in principle what Synergy stands for, but unfortunately in a regional service where you get admissions all kinds of the day, that’s of no help, very much.(Unit Leader 1)
3.3.3. Attrition of Nurse Champion
[Name-nurse champion] had had enough! She left, and she was the go-getter of it all. Yeah, oh yeah! It’s kind of dropped off the face of the earth and [Name-new nurse champion] is trying to keep it going.(Direct Care Nurse 6)
3.3.4. Confusion between Standardization and Unit Adaptation of the Synergy Model
So, we had worked for a few years to develop our Synergy definitions, to have them reflect our population on our site. And when it went to MEDITECH, they became generic again.(Unit Leader 4)
3.4. Positive Outcomes to Synergy Model Implementation
3.4.1. More Equitable Patient Assignments and Improved Decision Making
The main positive one is, I think, people understanding why and not being upset, saying, “Well, I got this assignment, you got that assignment. How come?” or people feeling that ng they unfairly had, you know, heavier assignments.(Unit Leader 2)
3.4.2. Improved Communication and Advocacy for More Resources
When we’re talking as nurses and saying, “Oh, how’s your day going?” “Oh, it’s so heavy today”. You look at the numbers and go, “Wow. Yeah, you’ve got a lot of number threes [moderate acuity] on that piece of paper. A lot of people are really complex”.…It is there in black and white, it’s not a nurse saying, “Oh, I have to walk my patients to the bathroom all the time”.(Direct Care Nurse 9)
We also use the Synergy Model…if we need to up-staff… We could at one point have, you know, four or five, six very, very ill patients on the ward. Then we may need an extra actual RN-level nurse on the ward versus an RPN. And that helps us to give the proof that we need this extra staff at the time.(Unit Leader 3)
3.4.3. Improved Workplace Culture
Well, from a positive perspective, we have less staff complaints about workload and greater teamwork, better culture on the floor. I think because of Synergy, they recognize that the synergy tool is being employed to be sensitive to the actual workload of a particular nurse and not just the generic assignment of, you know, “Everybody gets five patients and good luck” kind of thing.(Unit Leader 7)
3.5. Negative Outcomes to Implementation of the Synergy Model
3.5.1. Increased Levels of Frustration
Well, when it works, it works well [laughs]. Then it doesn’t work. Then people are going home frustrated and tired. And then the long-term outcome from that is the young people say I can work somewhere else, less stressful, I’m out of here and all that training time is useless because they’re gone.(Direct Care Nurse 8)
3.5.2. Increased Burden on Experienced Staff
That being said, as a senior nurse, I sometimes feel like I get crapped on a lot of the time. Because with [XX] years of experience and number [XX] from the top with seniority, I walk in and I just know every shift that I come into work, it is going to suck.(Direct Care Nurse 6)
3.5.3. Change Fatigue
Well, I think because there’s change, you know, people are kind of, you know, what do they call that? Change fatigue. So, again, we chip away every day with compliance and then getting people to score accurately.(Unit Leader 4)
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Research Question 1. What are the reasons for adopting the Synergy Model? |
Themes
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Research Question 2. What are the facilitators and barriers during the implementation of the Synergy Model? |
Facilitator Themes:
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Barrier Themes:
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Research Question 3. What are the participants’ perceived outcomes after implementation of the Synergy Model? |
Positive Outcomes Themes:
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Negative Outcomes Themes
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Senior Leadership Recommendations |
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Unit Leaders |
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Nurses |
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Share and Cite
Cordon, C.P.; Baxter, P.; Collerman, A.; Krull, K.; Aiello, C.; Lounsbury, J.; MacPhee, M.; Udod, S.; Alvarado, K.; Dietrich, T.; et al. Implementing the Synergy Model: A Qualitative Descriptive Study. Nurs. Rep. 2022, 12, 100-111. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep12010011
Cordon CP, Baxter P, Collerman A, Krull K, Aiello C, Lounsbury J, MacPhee M, Udod S, Alvarado K, Dietrich T, et al. Implementing the Synergy Model: A Qualitative Descriptive Study. Nursing Reports. 2022; 12(1):100-111. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep12010011
Chicago/Turabian StyleCordon, Charissa P., Pamela Baxter, Ari Collerman, Kirsten Krull, Celia Aiello, Jennifer Lounsbury, Maura MacPhee, Sonia Udod, Kim Alvarado, Tim Dietrich, and et al. 2022. "Implementing the Synergy Model: A Qualitative Descriptive Study" Nursing Reports 12, no. 1: 100-111. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep12010011
APA StyleCordon, C. P., Baxter, P., Collerman, A., Krull, K., Aiello, C., Lounsbury, J., MacPhee, M., Udod, S., Alvarado, K., Dietrich, T., Akhtar-Danesh, N., Ramachandran, M., & Meisenburg, N. (2022). Implementing the Synergy Model: A Qualitative Descriptive Study. Nursing Reports, 12(1), 100-111. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep12010011