4.5 Article

Operating Room In Situ Interprofessional Simulation for Improving Communication and Teamwork

Journal

JOURNAL OF SURGICAL RESEARCH
Volume 260, Issue -, Pages 237-244

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jss.2020.11.051

Keywords

In situ simulation; Interprofessional; Operating room; Teamwork; Communication; TeamSTEPPS

Categories

Funding

  1. Stanford University School of Medicine Risk Authority Grant

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Effective teamwork and communication are crucial for patient care quality in the OR. Poor teamwork and communication lead to poorer outcomes. Professionals agree that communication is key to effective teamwork and have identified barriers that hinder effective communication.
Background: Effective teamwork and communication are correlated with improved patient care quality and outcomes. The belief that each team member contributes to excellent patient care in the operating room (OR) leads to a more productive work environment. However, poor teamwork and communication lead to poorer OR outcomes. We qualitatively and quantitatively explored perspectives of three OR professions (nursing, anesthesiology, and surgery) on teamwork and communication in the OR preinterprofessional and postinterprofessional in situ OR simulation. Materials and methods: One-on-one semi-structured interviews were conducted; 14 pre-in situ simulations during July-October 2017 (three surgery, four anesthesiology, and six nursing staff), and 10 post-in situ simulations during August-November 2017 (five surgery, four anesthesiology, and one nursing staff). Themes were identified inductively to create a codebook. The codebook was used to consensus code all interviews. This analysis informed the development of a quantitative survey distributed to all contactable interviewees (22). Results: Presimulation and postsimulation interview participants concurred on teamwork and communication importance, believed communication to be key to effective teamwork, and identified barriers to communication: lack of cordiality, lack of engagement from other staff, distractions, role hierarchies, and lack of familiarity with other staff. The large majority of survey participantsdall having participated in simulationsdbelieved they could use effective communication in their workplace. Conclusions: Establishing methods for improving and maintaining the ability of OR professionals to communicate with each other is imperative for patient safety. Effective team communication leads to safe and successful outcomes, as well as a productive and supportive OR work environment. (c) 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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