“Unnecessary noise is the most cruel abuse of care which can be inflicted on either the sick or the well.”

Florence Nightingale, Notes on Nursing (1860)

In an effort to improve the quality and efficiency of our nursing care delivery and our communication, we recently introduced a wearable hands-free voice communications system. We did this first as a trial on just a few patient care units and now it is being used on all in-patient units throughout the hospital. Our new communications system has proven to be very useful. As with most technological innovations, however, we encountered a number of “glitches” and decided to take a closer look at our organization’s healthcare providers’ perceptions and satisfaction with this new technology. To do this, we designed and carried out a research study that yielded some interesting findings that revealed both pros and cons of our new communications system.

Purpose

The purpose of this prospective observational and survey research study was to measure the perceptions and satisfaction of healthcare providers regarding voice communications technology.

Background

Inpatient healthcare delivery involves frequent communication as well as inter- and interdisciplinary communication. This “transactional” communication process involves a communicator “A” encoding a message into language and conveying it through some medium, which for the purposes of our study was the voice communications technology, and a communicator “B” receiving and interpreting the message sent through the medium.

The “Message in the Medium,” which in this study is a voice communications badge, is a central component of the communication process. Recent improvements in voice-recognition, wireless technology, connectivity, and identity management now make intelligent communications in healthcare using voice communications technology a practical reality. In fact, researchers have identified electronic communication technology as having an important role in the efficient operations of healthcare organizations.

Recognizing the power of applying this technology in our 642-bed acute care hospital, leadership selected a voice communications system for trial implementation. Our medical center is a Level I Regional Trauma Center that has been designated and redesignated as a Magnet hospital by the American Nurses Credentialing Center. The voice communications system now being used on all in-patient units throughout the hospital is a wearable, hands-free communication system that uses the existing wireless network to support instant mobile voice communications and messaging among healthcare staff.

The voice communications system consists of two main components: the server software and the badge, which is a small, wearable device that weighs less than two ounces and permits one-button voice access to other users on the system or connects to outside telephones through Private Branch eXchange (PBX) integration. PBX is a telephone exchange that serves a particular business, as opposed to one that a telephone company operates for businesses or for the general public. Badge features include voice controls, which provide hands-free ability to answer incoming calls; the ability to designate the individual to be called by name, title, function, or group, thus eliminating the need to know telephone numbers or who is on duty; conference calling, broadcast messages, and voice mail messaging, thus facilitating group announcements; and the ability to call to and from the badge through the PBX to other telephones inside or outside the hospital.

Though the potential benefits and the impact of voice communications technology have been studied previously, early research has focused primarily on workflow, communications, and caregiver satisfaction. Comparing our voice communications technology and other voice communications units, data gathered by Breslin and others at St. Agnes Healthcare in Baltimore, MD, revealed: