Objectives: To assess closed-loop communications (readback), a fundamental aspect of effective communication, among cardiovascular teams and assess improvement efforts.
Background: Effective communication within teams is essential to assure safety and optimal outcomes. Readback of verbal physician orders is a hospital and national requirement.
Methods: Single-center observational study, where the readback responses to physician verbal orders in the catheterization laboratory were characterized over three distinct time intervals from 2015 to 2017. Performance feedback and focused education on the value of readbacks was provided to the teams in two waves, with subsequent remeasurement. Responses to verbal orders were characterized as complete (all important parameters of the order repeated for verification), partial, acknowledgement only, or no response. Changes in readback performance after quality interventions were assessed.
Results: During the first-observational period of 101 cases, complete readback occurred in 195 of 515 (38%) medication orders and 136 of 235 (58%) equipment orders. After initial quality improvement efforts, 102 cases were observed. In these, 298 of 480 (62%) medication orders had complete readback, and 210 of 420 (50%) equipment orders had complete readback. After additional quality improvement efforts, 168 cases were observed. In these, 506 of 723 (70%) medication orders had complete readback, and 630 of 1,061 (59%) equipment orders had complete readback. Overall, medication order readback improved over time (correlation = 0.26 [-0.30, -0.21]; p < 0.001), but equipment order readback did not (correlation = 0.02 [-0.07, 0.03]; p = 0.44).
Conclusions: Closed-loop communication of physician verbal orders was used infrequently in this medical team setting and proved difficult to fully improve. This is an important safety gap.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ccd.28298 | DOI Listing |
Can J Surg
May 2023
From the Department of Surgery, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alb. (Cowan, Kim, Mador, Verhoeff, Widder); the Department of Surgery, Indiana University, Indianapolis, Indianna (Murphy); the Department of Critical Care, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alb. (Cowan, Kim, Widder); the Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alb. (Chang, Kabaroff); the Alberta Emergency Medical Services, Alberta Health Services, Edmonton, Alb. (Cameron); and the Shock Trauma Air Rescue Society, Alberta, Edmonton, Alb. (Cowan, North).
Background: Handover to the trauma team is crucial to trauma care. The emergency medical services (EMS) report must be concise, contain key details, and be time-limited. Effective handover is difficult, often occurring between unfamiliar teams, in chaotic environments, and without standardization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Nurs
February 2023
Department of English, City University of Hong Kong, 83 Tat Hong Avenue, Kowloon Tong, Hong Kong.
Effective clinical nursing handover involves the transfer of responsibility and accountability for patient care between nurses, leading to better patient safety and continuity of care. Nurses in bilingual contexts, such as Hong Kong - where nurses are trained in English but communicate in Cantonese - may find it challenging to deliver a safe clinical handover. This article reports a pilot study in which a simulation-based approach is being developed to enhance nursing handover with structured and interactive interactions, using handover protocols such as ISBAR (introduction, situation, background, assessment, recommendation and readback) and CARE-team (connect, ask, respond, empathise) protocols in a bilingual context.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2022
Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
In this work, the possibility to reduce transition curvature in heat-assisted magnetic recording, using a conventional write head design, by shaping the recording field to counteract the circular profile of the heat pulse is investigated. Topology optimization of the head tip is performed in order to create the desired cross-track field profile for increasing distances from the write head tip. For the topology optimization, the adjoint method is utilized to calculate the necessary gradients and a binary optimization scheme is proposed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCatheter Cardiovasc Interv
January 2020
Department of Medicine, Center for Heart and Vascular Health, Christiana Care Health System, Newark, Delaware.
Objectives: To assess closed-loop communications (readback), a fundamental aspect of effective communication, among cardiovascular teams and assess improvement efforts.
Background: Effective communication within teams is essential to assure safety and optimal outcomes. Readback of verbal physician orders is a hospital and national requirement.
BMJ Qual Saf
September 2017
Center for Quality and Safety and Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital and Massachusetts General Physicians Organization, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Background: Healthcare has become increasingly complex and care delivery models have changed dramatically (eg, team-based care, duty-hour restrictions). However, approaches to critical communications among providers have not evolved to meet these new challenges. Evidence from safety culture surveys, academic studies and malpractice claims suggests that healthcare handover quality is problematic, leading to preventable errors and adverse outcomes.
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