Develop an 8–14 slide PowerPoint presentation with thorough speaker's notes designed for a hypothetical in-service session related to the improvement plan you developed in Assessment 2.
As a practicing professional, you are likely to present educational in-services or training to staff pertaining to quality improvement (QI) measures of safety improvement interventions. Such in-services and training sessions should be presented in a creative and innovative manner to hold the audience’s attention and promote knowledge acquisition and skill application that changes practice for the better. The teaching sessions may include a presentation, audience participation via simulation or other interactive strategy, audiovisual media, and participant learning evaluation.
The use of in-services and/or training sessions has positive implications for nursing practice by increasing staff confidence when providing care to specific patient populations. It also allows for a safe and nonthreatening environment where staff nurses can practice their skills prior to a real patient event. Participation in learning sessions fosters a team approach, collaboration, patient safety, and greater patient satisfaction rates in the healthcare environment (Patel & Wright, 2018).
As you prepare to complete the assessment, consider the impact of in-service training on patient outcomes as well as practice outcomes for staff nurses. Be sure to support your thoughts on the effectiveness of educating and training staff to increase the quality of care provided to patients by examining the literature and established best practices.
You are encouraged to explore the AONL (American Organization of Nursing Leadership) Nurse Executive Competencies Review activity before you develop the Improvement Plan In-Service Presentation. This activity will help you review your understanding of the AONL Nurse Executive Competencies—especially those related to competencies relevant to developing an effective training session and presentation. This is for your own practice and self-assessment, and demonstrates your engagement in the course.
Develop a PowerPoint presentation with detailed speaker's notes representing the material you would deliver at a one-hour in-service session to raise awareness of your chosen safety improvement initiative and explain the need for it. Additionally, you must educate the audience as to their role and importance to the success of the initiative. This includes providing examples and practice opportunities to test out new ideas or practices related to the safety improvement initiative.
Be sure that your plan addresses the following, which corresponds to the grading criteria in the rubric. Please study the rubric carefully so that you understand what is needed for a distinguished score.
• Describe the purpose and at least three goals of an in-service session for nurses.
o Include a one-line purpose statement followed by the goals.
o Start each goal with a verb, such as 1) Explain reasons for medication administration errors, 2) Discuss the importance of preventing medication errors, and 3) Describe strategies to prevent medication errors.
• Explain the need for and process to improve safety outcomes related to a specific patient-safety issue.
• Explain to the audience their role and the importance of making the improvement plan successful.
• Create resources or activities to encourage skill development and process understanding related to a safety improvement initiative.
o Create a resource slide OR do an activity with the audience to assist them in learning and applying a new skill. A resource slide could consist of in-house materials, posters, or credible websites. An activity slide may include a quiz, simulation, group work, a case study, and so forth.
• Communicate with nurses in a respectful and informative way that clearly presents expectations and solicits feedback on communication strategies for future improvement.
There are various ways to structure an in-service session; below is just one example:
• Part 1: Agenda and Outcomes.
o Explain to your audience what they are going to learn or do, and what they are expected to take away.
• Part 2: Safety Improvement Plan.
o Give an overview of the current problem, the proposed plan, and what the improvement plan is trying to address.
o Explain why it is important for the organization to address the current situation.
• Part 3: Audience’s Role and Importance.
o Discuss how the staff audience will be expected to help implement and drive the improvement plan.
o Explain why they are critical to the success of the improvement plan.
o Describe how their work could benefit from embracing their role in the plan.
• Part 4: New Process and Skills Practice.
o Explain new processes or skills.
o Develop an activity that allows the staff audience to practice and ask questions about these.
o In the notes section, brainstorm potential responses to likely questions or concerns.
• Part 5: Soliciting Feedback.
o Describe how you would solicit feedback from the audience on the improvement plan and the in-service.
o Explain how you might integrate this feedback for future improvements.
• Competency 1: Analyze the elements of a successful quality improvement initiative.
o Explain the need for and process to improve safety outcomes related to a specific patient safety issue.
o Create resources or activities to encourage skill development and process understanding related to a safety improvement initiative.
• Competency 4: Explain the nurse's role in coordinating care to enhance quality and reduce costs.
o Describe the purpose and at least three goals of an in-service session on a specific patient safety issue.
o Explain to an audience its role and importance of making an improvement plan successful.
• Competency 5: Apply professional, scholarly, evidence-based strategies to communicate in a manner that supports safe and effective patient care.
o Slides are easy to read and error free. Detailed speaker notes are provided. Speaker notes are clear, organized, and professionally presented.
o Organize content with clear purpose and goals and with relevant and evidence-based sources published within the last five years.