An observational study of patient care outcomes sensitive to handover quality in the Post-Anaesthetic Care Unit

被引:6
|
作者
Lillibridge, Nichole [1 ,2 ]
Botti, Mari [1 ,3 ]
Wood, Beverley [3 ]
Redley, Bernice [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Deakin Univ, Sch Nursing & Midwifery, Geelong, Vic, Australia
[2] Royal Melbourne Hosp, Parkville, Vic, Australia
[3] Epworth Partnership, Ctr Qual & Patient Safety Res, Richmond, Vic, Australia
[4] Deakin Univ, Ctr Qual & Patient Safety Res, Sch Nursing & Midwifery, Monash Hlth Partnership, Clayton, Vic, Australia
关键词
communication; interprofessional care; nursing handover; patient safety; CLINICAL HANDOVER; TEAM PERFORMANCE; ISOBAR; SAFETY;
D O I
10.1111/jocn.13833
中图分类号
R47 [护理学];
学科分类号
1011 ;
摘要
Aims and objectivesTo identify patient care outcome indicators sensitive to the quality of interprofessional handover between the anaesthetist and the Post-Anaesthetic Care Unit nurse. BackgroundThe relationship between interprofessional clinical handover when patients are transferred from the operating theatre to the Post-Anaesthetic Care Unit and patient outcomes of subsequent patient care delivery is not well understood. DesignNaturalistic, exploratory descriptive design using observation. MethodsObservations of 31 patient journeys through Post-Anaesthetic Care Units across three public and private hospitals. Characteristics of interprofessional handover on arrival in the Post-Anaesthetic Care Unit, the trajectory of patient care activities in Post-Anaesthetic Care Unit and patient outcomes were observed. ResultsOf the 821 care activities observed across 31 patient journeys in the Post-Anaesthetic Care Unit, observations (assessments and vital signs) (52.5 %), communication (15.8 %) and pain management (assessment of pain and analgesic administration) (10.3%) were most common. Examination of patterns in handover communications and subsequent trajectories of patient care activities revealed three patient trajectory typologies and two patient outcome indicators expected to be sensitive to the quality of interprofessional handover communication in the Post-Anaesthetic Care Unit: pain on discharge from the Post-Anaesthetic Care Unit and timely response to clinical deterioration. An additional process indicator, seeking missing information, was also identified. ConclusionsPatient's pain on discharge from Post-Anaesthetic Care Unit, escalation of care in response to early signs of deterioration and the need for nurses to seek out missing information to deliver care are indicators expected to be sensitive to the quality of interprofessional handover communication in the Post-Anaesthetic Care Unit. Future research should test these indicators. Relevance to clinical practicePatient outcomes sensitive to the quality of interprofessional handover on patient arrival in the Post-Anaesthetic Care Unit can be used to evaluate handover quality improvement initiatives. Quality handovers can improve management of pain and clinical deterioration in Post-Anaesthetic Care Unit and reduce time wasted searching for missing information.
引用
收藏
页码:4786 / 4794
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Quality of handover in a pediatric postanesthesia care unit
    Piekarski, Florian
    Kaufmann, Jost
    Laschat, Michael
    Boehmer, Andreas
    Engelhardt, Thomas
    Wappler, Frank
    PEDIATRIC ANESTHESIA, 2015, 25 (07) : 746 - 752
  • [22] Quality of handover to the postanaesthesia care unit nurse
    Anwari, JS
    ANAESTHESIA, 2002, 57 (05) : 488 - 493
  • [23] A specialized post-anaesthetic care unit improves fast-track management in cardiac surgery: a prospective randomized trial
    Probst, Stefan
    Cech, Christof
    Haentschel, Dirk
    Scholz, Markus
    Ender, Joerg
    CRITICAL CARE, 2014, 18 (04):
  • [24] A specialized post-anaesthetic care unit improves fast-track management in cardiac surgery: a prospective randomized trial
    Stefan Probst
    Christof Cech
    Dirk Haentschel
    Markus Scholz
    Joerg Ender
    Critical Care, 18
  • [25] Patient flow in the postanesthesia care unit: an observational study
    Tessler, MJ
    Mitmaker, L
    Wahba, RM
    Covert, CR
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA-JOURNAL CANADIEN D ANESTHESIE, 1999, 46 (04): : 348 - 351
  • [26] Evaluation of the association between quality of handover and length of stay in the post anaesthesia care unit: a pilot study
    Bittner, E. A.
    George, E.
    Eikermann, M.
    Schmidt, U.
    ANAESTHESIA, 2012, 67 (05) : 548 - 549
  • [27] The post-anaesthetic care unit re-imagined: Whipps Cross Hospital's COVID-19 recovery initiative
    Matthews, J.
    Kandasamy, G.
    Murdeshwar, H.
    Kwok, S.
    Muthusamy, S.
    ANAESTHESIA, 2023, 78 : 34 - 34
  • [28] Postoperative hypoxaemia after transport from operating theatre to post-anaesthetic care unit: identifying incidence and risk factors in children
    Shahani, J.
    Suratos, F. Teddy
    ANAESTHESIA, 2015, 70 : 40 - 40
  • [29] Impact of adverse events on patient outcomes in a Japanese intensive care unit: a retrospective observational study
    Aikawa, Gen
    Ouchi, Akira
    Sakuramoto, Hideaki
    Ono, Chiemi
    Hatozaki, Chie
    Okamoto, Mayu
    Hoshino, Tetsuya
    Shimojo, Nobutake
    Inoue, Yoshiaki
    NURSING OPEN, 2021, 8 (06): : 3271 - 3280
  • [30] Low anaesthetic waste gas concentrations in postanaesthesia care unit A prospective observational study
    Heiderich, Sebastian
    Thoben, Christian
    Dennhardt, Nils
    Koppert, Wolfgang
    Krauss, Terence
    Suempelmann, Robert
    Zimmermann, Stefan
    Klingler, Werner
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIOLOGY, 2018, 35 (07) : 534 - 538