Analyzing and mitigating the risks of patient harm during operating room to intensive care unit patient handoffs

被引:0
|
作者
Martins, Nara Regina Spall [1 ]
Martinez, Edson Zangiacomi [2 ]
Simoes, Claudia Marquez [1 ]
Barach, Paul Randall [3 ,4 ]
Carmona, Maria Jose Carvalho [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sao Paulo, Fac Med, Ave Dr Arnaldo, 455-Sala 4107, BR-01246903 Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil
[2] Univ Sao Paulo, Fac Med Ribeirao Preto, Ave Bandeirantes, 3900 Bairro Monte Alegre, BR-14049900 Ribeirao Preto, SP, Brazil
[3] Thomas Jefferson Univ, Sch Med, 901 Walnut St,Ste 10, Philadelphia, PA 19107 USA
[4] Sigmund Freud Private Univ, Fac Med, Freudpl 3, A-1020 Vienna, Austria
关键词
risk management; process mapping; hand-off; qualitative research; failure modes and effects analysis (FMEA); HEALTH-CARE; QUALITATIVE RESEARCH; SAFETY;
D O I
10.1093/intqhc/mzae114
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Patients continue to suffer from preventable harm and uneven quality outcomes. Reliable clinical outcomes depend on the quality of robust administrative systems and reliable support processes. Critically ill patient handoffs from the operating room (OR) to the intensive care unit (ICU) are known to be high-risk events. We describe a novel perspective on how risk factors associated with the process of patient handoff communication between the OR and the ICU can lead to flawed communication, degraded team awareness, medical errors, and increased patient harm. Data were collected from two semi-structured focus groups using a five-step risk management approach at a tertiary hospital in S & atilde;o Paulo, Brazil. We conducted a failure modes and effects analysis (FMEA) with multidisciplinary healthcare providers consisting of attending physicians, anesthesiologists, nurses, and physiotherapists involved in patient handoffs. We analyzed the results using a similitude analysis to evaluate the effectiveness of implementing this novel risk management approach. We identified the handoffs risks associated with patients, staff, institution, and potential financial risks. The FMEA identified 12 process failures and 36 causes that generated 12 consequences and pointed to robust needed preventive measures to mitigate handoff risks. The clinical teams reported that this approach allowed them to see the process more completely as a whole not only in their narrow silos, thus understanding the enablers and difficulties of the other team members and how this understanding can shed light on their mental models, actions, and the process reliability. Teams identified key steps in the OR to ICU handoff process that are prone to the highest hazards to patients, the hospital, and staff, and are currently targeted for process improvement. Evidence-driven recommendations intended for reducing the risks associated with patient handoffs are presented. Implementing a dynamic risk management, interdisciplinary approach was used to redesign the OR to ICU patient handoff approach around the patient's and clinician's needs. The risk management program helped healthcare providers identify handoff steps, highlighting risky handoff process failures, making it possible to identify actionable failures, consequences, and define preventative action plans for mitigating the risks to improve the quality and safety of patient handoffs.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Operating room to intensive care unit handoffs and the risks of patient harm
    McElroy, Lisa M.
    Collins, Kelly M.
    Koller, Felicitas L.
    Khorzad, Rebeca
    Abecassis, Michael M.
    Holl, Jane L.
    Ladner, Daniela P.
    SURGERY, 2015, 158 (03) : 588 - 594
  • [2] Standardization of Pediatric Noncardiac Operating Room to Intensive Care Unit Handoffs Improves Communication and Patient Care
    Hebballi, Nutan B.
    Gupta, Vikas S.
    Sheppard, Kyle
    Kubanda, Ann
    Salley, Danielle
    Ostovar-Kermani, Tiffany
    Bryndzia, Christina
    Khan, Amir M.
    Wadhwa, Nitin
    Tsao, KuoJen
    Jain, Ranu
    Kawaguchi, Akemi L.
    JOURNAL OF PATIENT SAFETY, 2022, 18 (06) : E1021 - E1026
  • [3] Operating Room to Intensive Care Unit Handoffs: Time to Recognize an Underrated Predictor of Patient Outcome
    Rath, Girija P.
    Singh, Gyaninder P.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROANAESTHESIOLOGY AND CRITICAL CARE, 2019, 6 (03) : 179 - 181
  • [4] Pilot Implementation of a Perioperative Protocol to Guide Operating Room-to-Intensive Care Unit Patient Handoffs
    Petrovic, Michelle A.
    Aboumatar, Hanan
    Baumgartner, William A.
    Ulatowski, John A.
    Moyer, Jenny
    Chang, Tracy Y.
    Camp, Melissa S.
    Kowalski, Janet
    Senger, Carolyn M.
    Martinez, Elizabeth A.
    JOURNAL OF CARDIOTHORACIC AND VASCULAR ANESTHESIA, 2012, 26 (01) : 11 - 16
  • [5] Handoff checklists improve the reliability of patient handoffs in the operating room and postanesthesia care unit
    Boat, Anne C.
    Spaeth, James P.
    PEDIATRIC ANESTHESIA, 2013, 23 (07) : 647 - 654
  • [6] Often Overlooked Problems with Handoffs: From the Intensive Care Unit to the Operating Room
    Evans, Adam S.
    Yee, May-Sann
    Hogue, Charles W.
    ANESTHESIA AND ANALGESIA, 2014, 118 (03): : 687 - 689
  • [7] Developing an Operating Room-to-Intensive Care Unit Patient Handover Checklist
    Mahran, Ghada Shalaby Khalaf
    Mahmoud Ahmed Mahmoud, Safaa
    Abdelmowla, Rasha Ali Ahmed
    Abdelmowla, Hanan Ali Ahmed
    El-aziz, Wafaa Wahdan Abd
    Mohamed, Sherif A. A.
    Ali, Aida Faried Abdelwanees
    CRITICAL CARE NURSING QUARTERLY, 2024, 47 (01) : 51 - 61
  • [8] Handoffs and transitions in critical care (HATRICC): protocol for a mixed methods study of operating room to intensive care unit handoffs
    Lane-Fall, Meghan B.
    Beidas, Rinad S.
    Pascual, Jose L.
    Collard, Meredith L.
    Peifer, Hannah G.
    Chavez, Tyler J.
    Barry, Mark E.
    Gutsche, Jacob T.
    Halpern, Scott D.
    Fleisher, Lee A.
    Barg, Frances K.
    BMC SURGERY, 2014, 14
  • [9] Handoffs and transitions in critical care (HATRICC): protocol for a mixed methods study of operating room to intensive care unit handoffs
    Meghan B Lane-Fall
    Rinad S Beidas
    Jose L Pascual
    Meredith L Collard
    Hannah G Peifer
    Tyler J Chavez
    Mark E Barry
    Jacob T Gutsche
    Scott D Halpern
    Lee A Fleisher
    Frances K Barg
    BMC Surgery, 14
  • [10] Leveraging Telemedicine Infrastructure to Monitor Quality of Operating Room to Intensive Care Unit Handoffs
    Barry, Mark E.
    Hochman, Beth R.
    Lane-Fall, Meghan B.
    Zappile, Denise
    Holena, Daniel N.
    Smith, Brian P.
    Kaplan, Lewis J.
    Huffenberger, Ann
    Reilly, Patrick M.
    Pascual, Jose L.
    ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 2017, 92 (07) : 1035 - 1042