PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Jaco Tresfon AU - Anja H Brunsveld-Reinders AU - David van Valkenburg AU - Kirsten Langeveld AU - Jaap Hamming TI - Aligning work-as-imagined and work-as-done using FRAM on a hospital ward: a roadmap AID - 10.1136/bmjoq-2022-001992 DP - 2022 Oct 01 TA - BMJ Open Quality PG - e001992 VI - 11 IP - 4 4099 - http://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/11/4/e001992.short 4100 - http://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/11/4/e001992.full SO - BMJ Open Qual2022 Oct 01; 11 AB - Introduction Modern safety approaches in healthcare differentiate between daily practice (work-as-done) and the written rules and guidelines (work-as-imagined) as a means to further develop patient safety. Research in this area has shown case study examples, but to date lacks hooking points as to how results can be embedded within the studied context. This study uses Functional Analysis Resonance Method (FRAM) for aligning work-as-imagined with the work-as-done. The aim of this study is to show how FRAM can effectively be applied to identify the gap between work prescriptions and practice, while subsequently showing how such findings can be transferred back to, and embedded in, the daily ward care process of nurses.Methods This study was part of an action research performed among ward nurses on a 38 bed neurological and neurosurgical ward within a tertiary referral centre. Data was collected through document analysis, in-field observations, interviews and group discussions. FRAM was used as an analysis tool to model the prescribed working methods, actual practice and the gap between those two in the use of physical restraints on the ward.Results This study was conducted in four parts. In the exploration phase, work-as-imagined and work-as-done were mapped. Next, a gap between the concerns named in the protocol and the actual employed methods of dealing with physical restraint on the ward was identified. Subsequently, alignment efforts led to the co-construction of a new working method with the ward nurses, which was later embedded in quality efforts by a restraint working group on the ward.Conclusion The use of FRAM proved to be very effective in comparing work-as-done with work-as-imagined, contributing to a better understanding, evaluation and support of everyday performance in a ward care setting.Data are available upon reasonable request.