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Improving Handoffs Between Operating Room and Pediatric Intensive Care Teams: Before and After Study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Patient transfers between the operating room (OR) and Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) are prone to miscommunication and errors, prompting a quality improvement initiative to standardize the handoff process.
  • A multidisciplinary team developed and implemented a standardized handoff protocol with a checklist in the Dartmouth PICU, leading to a significant increase in information transfer from 56% preintervention to 81% postintervention.
  • The new protocol improved information completeness without extending the time required for handoffs, ensuring patient safety during transfers.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Patient transfer between teams and units is known to be a high-risk event for miscommunication and therefore error. We instituted a quality improvement initiative to formalize patient handoffs from the operating room (OR) to the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU). We hypothesized that measures of information transfer would improve.

Methods: In this before and after study, a multidisciplinary team developed a standardized handoff protocol (including a checklist) instituted in the Dartmouth PICU over the summer of 2016. We directly observed pediatric admissions from OR to PICU and collected data on information transfer and patient outcome metrics both before and after the institution of the handoff protocol at the time of transfer (intervention).

Results: We directly observed 52 handoffs (29 preintervention, 23 postintervention). The mean patient age was 9.3 years (SD, 6.5), with 55% male. Preintervention the average information transfer was 56% (upper control limit, 76%; lower control limit, 36%), whereas postintervention it was 81% (upper control limit, 97%, lower control limit, 65%). The improvement in information transfer postintervention was statistically significant ( < 0.001). There was no statistically significant change in maximum pain score in the first 6 hours after admission (preintervention, 4.5, SD 3.9; postintervention, 2.9, SD 1.3, = 0.15). There was no difference in the time required for handoff pre- versus postintervention (8.7 minutes, SD 5.5 versus 10.1 minutes, SD 4.6, = 0.34).

Conclusion: Standardization of OR to PICU patient transfers using a predetermined checklist at the time of handoff can improve the completeness of information transfer without increasing the length of the handoff.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6221591PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/pq9.0000000000000101DOI Listing

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