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Leveraging the Science of Teamwork to Sustain Handoff Improvements in Cardiovascular Surgery. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study focused on enhancing the reliability of handoffs and transitions in cardiovascular care at a busy academic medical center, where a previously implemented handoff process had poor adoption.
  • - Using methods like Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles and participatory design, researchers redesigned the handoff process, assessed it through video analysis, and developed a bundle of best practices with cognitive aids.
  • - Results showed significant improvements in team leadership, communication, coordination, and cooperation in handoffs, with sustained success observed over 2.3 years after implementing the new bundle.

Article Abstract

Background: Improving the reliability of handoffs and care transitions is an important goal for many health care organizations. Increasing evidence shows that human-centered design and improved teamwork can lead to sustainable care transition improvements and better patient outcomes. This study was conducted within a cardiovascular service line at an academic medical center that performs more than 600 surgical procedures annually. A handoff process previously implemented at the center was poorly adopted. This work aimed to improve cardiovascular handoffs by applying human factors and the science of teamwork.

Methods: The study's quality improvement method used Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles and participatory design and ergonomics to develop, implement, and assess a new handoff process and bundle. Trained observers analyzed video-recorded and live handoffs to assess teamwork, leadership, communication, coordination, cooperation, and sustainability of unit-defined handoff best practices. The intervention included a teamwork-focused redesign process and handoff bundle with supporting cognitive aids and assessment metrics.

Results: The study assessed 153 handoffs in multiple phases over 3 years (2016-2019). Quantitative and qualitative assessments of clinician (teamwork) and implementation outcomes were performed. Compared with the baseline, the observed handoffs demonstrated improved team leadership (p < 0.0001), communication (p < 0.0001), coordination (p = 0.0018), and cooperation (p = 0.007) following the deployment of the handoff bundle. Sustained improvements in fidelity to unit-defined handoff best practices continued 2.3 years post-deployment of the handoff bundle.

Conclusion: Participatory design and ergonomics, combined with implementation and safety science principles, can provide an evidence-based approach for sustaining complex sociotechnical change and making handoffs more reliable.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcjq.2023.05.006DOI Listing

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