The Johns Hopkins Activity and Mobility Promotion Program: A Framework to Increase Activity and Mobility among Hospitalized Patients

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Abstract

Background: Greater mobility and activity among hospitalized patients has been linked to key outcomes, including decreased length of stay, increased odds of home discharge, and fewer hospital-Acquired morbidities. Systematic approaches to increasing patient mobility and activity are needed to improve patient outcomes during and following hospitalization. Problem: While studies have found the Johns Hopkins Activity and Mobility Promotion (JH-AMP) program improves patient mobility and associated outcomes, program details and implementation methods are not published. Approach: JH-AMP is a systematic approach that includes 8 steps, described in this article: (1) organizational prioritization; (2) systematic measurement and daily mobility goal; (3) barrier mitigation; (4) local interdisciplinary roles; (5) sustainable education and training; (6) workflow integration; (7) data feedback; and (8) promotion and awareness. Conclusions: Hospitals and health care systems can use this information to guide implementation of JH-AMP at their institutions.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

McLaughlin, K. H., Friedman, M., Hoyer, E. H., Kudchadkar, S., Flanagan, E., Klein, L., … Young, D. (2023). The Johns Hopkins Activity and Mobility Promotion Program: A Framework to Increase Activity and Mobility among Hospitalized Patients. Journal of Nursing Care Quality, 38(2), 164–170. https://doi.org/10.1097/NCQ.0000000000000678

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