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Explicit Guidelines Improve Resident-Attending Communication

SAN FRANCISCO – Training residents to notify attending surgeons of any significant change in a patient’s condition greatly reduced the proportion of critical events that were not communicated to attending surgeons, from 33% to 2%, in a prospective study of four hospitals.

The current study was undertaken in response to a previous study by the same research group showing that ambiguity about who is responsible for communications contributed to communication breakdowns between attending surgeons and other members of the team at any point in patient care, Dr. Caprice C. Greenberg said at the annual clinical congress of the American College of Surgeons.

In the previous study, 444 malpractice claims were reviewed, and this process identified 60 cases in which communication breakdown resulted in harm to a patient. Dr. Greenberg and colleagues found that communication breakdowns related to surgery are equally likely to happen during preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative care, and most commonly involve communications attempted between an attending surgeon and another attending surgeon, a resident, or the patient or family.

Ambiguity about who is responsible for communicating played a role in 58% of communication breakdowns, said Dr. Greenberg, director of the Wisconsin Surgical Outcomes Research Program and associate professor of surgery at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

Hand-offs of patient care from one provider to another contributed to 43% of communication breakdowns, and transferring a patient to a different location contributed to 39% of communication breakdowns. The data also showed that an asymmetry in status between the two communicating parties contributed to 74% of message breakdowns (J. Am. Coll. Surg. 2007;204:533-40).

Dr. Greenberg and her associates identified "triggers" that should prompt residents or nurses to contact attending surgeons, including a patient’s admission to a hospital, discharge, or a visit to an emergency department, transfer into or out of the ICU, unplanned intubation, or the development of cardiac arrest, new arrhythmia, or hemodynamic instability.

"Developing skills in communication are as important as the development and maintenance of technical skills."

Significant neurologic changes, major wound complications, unplanned blood transfusion, an invasive procedure or operation, or errors in medication or treatment necessitating an intervention also should trigger communication with the attending surgeon. Even simply concern by a surgical trainee or a request from a nurse or another physician to contact the attending surgeon were considered triggers for communication.

The triggers were included in guidelines created by representatives of the four hospitals in Harvard University’s system in a collaboration organized by the system’s malpractice insurers. Under the new guidelines, residents were to notify attending surgeons of any significant changes in a patient’s condition regardless of the day or time. The residents would be trained to understand what qualifies as "significant changes" based in part on specialty-specific definitions, she said.

"What a urologist cares about is probably a little bit different from what a neurosurgeon or cardiac surgeon cares about," she explained.

A study of practices before instituting these policies found that residents thought that 61 of 80 critical patient events (76%) did not need to be communicated to attending surgeons for safe patient care, and 26 events were not communicated (33%). Of the 54 events that were communicated, discussions with the attending surgeons changed management in 18 cases (33%). Attending surgeons responded to calls 100% of the time (Ann. Surg. 2009;250:861-5).

"It wasn’t that the attendings didn’t want to be called. It was that residents either felt unempowered to call or they felt that it wasn’t necessary," she said.

After adoption of the new guidelines, only 1 of 47 critical events (2%) was not communicated to an attending surgeon, the current study found (Ann. Surg. 2011;253:849-54).

"Developing skills in communication are as important as the development and maintenance of technical skills" to reduce the risk of errors, Dr. Greenberg said.

Breakdowns in communication are common and play a significant role in adverse events, prior data suggest. One study of 48 surgeries found that 31% of 421 attempted communications between surgical team members failed, and approximately a third of these communication failures potentially jeopardized patient safety (Qual. Saf. Health Care 2004;13:330-4).

Other strategies to reduce the risk of errors during surgery include "workload leveling," Dr. Greenberg added. This means the attending surgeon should communicate frequently to members of the interdisciplinary surgical team about the status of the case and expected progression of the case, so that team members can manage their time and plan to do auxiliary tasks at the appropriate times.

It’s probably impossible to avoid all errors, so surgeons need to find the right balance of error prevention and error mitigation through "resilience" – the ability to anticipate, cope with, recover from, and learn from unforeseen developments, she added. "To start to increase resilience, we really need to teach people adaptability and flexibility," she said.

 

 

Dr. Greenberg said she has no relevant conflicts of interest.

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SAN FRANCISCO – Training residents to notify attending surgeons of any significant change in a patient’s condition greatly reduced the proportion of critical events that were not communicated to attending surgeons, from 33% to 2%, in a prospective study of four hospitals.

The current study was undertaken in response to a previous study by the same research group showing that ambiguity about who is responsible for communications contributed to communication breakdowns between attending surgeons and other members of the team at any point in patient care, Dr. Caprice C. Greenberg said at the annual clinical congress of the American College of Surgeons.

In the previous study, 444 malpractice claims were reviewed, and this process identified 60 cases in which communication breakdown resulted in harm to a patient. Dr. Greenberg and colleagues found that communication breakdowns related to surgery are equally likely to happen during preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative care, and most commonly involve communications attempted between an attending surgeon and another attending surgeon, a resident, or the patient or family.

Ambiguity about who is responsible for communicating played a role in 58% of communication breakdowns, said Dr. Greenberg, director of the Wisconsin Surgical Outcomes Research Program and associate professor of surgery at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

Hand-offs of patient care from one provider to another contributed to 43% of communication breakdowns, and transferring a patient to a different location contributed to 39% of communication breakdowns. The data also showed that an asymmetry in status between the two communicating parties contributed to 74% of message breakdowns (J. Am. Coll. Surg. 2007;204:533-40).

Dr. Greenberg and her associates identified "triggers" that should prompt residents or nurses to contact attending surgeons, including a patient’s admission to a hospital, discharge, or a visit to an emergency department, transfer into or out of the ICU, unplanned intubation, or the development of cardiac arrest, new arrhythmia, or hemodynamic instability.

"Developing skills in communication are as important as the development and maintenance of technical skills."

Significant neurologic changes, major wound complications, unplanned blood transfusion, an invasive procedure or operation, or errors in medication or treatment necessitating an intervention also should trigger communication with the attending surgeon. Even simply concern by a surgical trainee or a request from a nurse or another physician to contact the attending surgeon were considered triggers for communication.

The triggers were included in guidelines created by representatives of the four hospitals in Harvard University’s system in a collaboration organized by the system’s malpractice insurers. Under the new guidelines, residents were to notify attending surgeons of any significant changes in a patient’s condition regardless of the day or time. The residents would be trained to understand what qualifies as "significant changes" based in part on specialty-specific definitions, she said.

"What a urologist cares about is probably a little bit different from what a neurosurgeon or cardiac surgeon cares about," she explained.

A study of practices before instituting these policies found that residents thought that 61 of 80 critical patient events (76%) did not need to be communicated to attending surgeons for safe patient care, and 26 events were not communicated (33%). Of the 54 events that were communicated, discussions with the attending surgeons changed management in 18 cases (33%). Attending surgeons responded to calls 100% of the time (Ann. Surg. 2009;250:861-5).

"It wasn’t that the attendings didn’t want to be called. It was that residents either felt unempowered to call or they felt that it wasn’t necessary," she said.

After adoption of the new guidelines, only 1 of 47 critical events (2%) was not communicated to an attending surgeon, the current study found (Ann. Surg. 2011;253:849-54).

"Developing skills in communication are as important as the development and maintenance of technical skills" to reduce the risk of errors, Dr. Greenberg said.

Breakdowns in communication are common and play a significant role in adverse events, prior data suggest. One study of 48 surgeries found that 31% of 421 attempted communications between surgical team members failed, and approximately a third of these communication failures potentially jeopardized patient safety (Qual. Saf. Health Care 2004;13:330-4).

Other strategies to reduce the risk of errors during surgery include "workload leveling," Dr. Greenberg added. This means the attending surgeon should communicate frequently to members of the interdisciplinary surgical team about the status of the case and expected progression of the case, so that team members can manage their time and plan to do auxiliary tasks at the appropriate times.

It’s probably impossible to avoid all errors, so surgeons need to find the right balance of error prevention and error mitigation through "resilience" – the ability to anticipate, cope with, recover from, and learn from unforeseen developments, she added. "To start to increase resilience, we really need to teach people adaptability and flexibility," she said.

 

 

Dr. Greenberg said she has no relevant conflicts of interest.

SAN FRANCISCO – Training residents to notify attending surgeons of any significant change in a patient’s condition greatly reduced the proportion of critical events that were not communicated to attending surgeons, from 33% to 2%, in a prospective study of four hospitals.

The current study was undertaken in response to a previous study by the same research group showing that ambiguity about who is responsible for communications contributed to communication breakdowns between attending surgeons and other members of the team at any point in patient care, Dr. Caprice C. Greenberg said at the annual clinical congress of the American College of Surgeons.

In the previous study, 444 malpractice claims were reviewed, and this process identified 60 cases in which communication breakdown resulted in harm to a patient. Dr. Greenberg and colleagues found that communication breakdowns related to surgery are equally likely to happen during preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative care, and most commonly involve communications attempted between an attending surgeon and another attending surgeon, a resident, or the patient or family.

Ambiguity about who is responsible for communicating played a role in 58% of communication breakdowns, said Dr. Greenberg, director of the Wisconsin Surgical Outcomes Research Program and associate professor of surgery at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

Hand-offs of patient care from one provider to another contributed to 43% of communication breakdowns, and transferring a patient to a different location contributed to 39% of communication breakdowns. The data also showed that an asymmetry in status between the two communicating parties contributed to 74% of message breakdowns (J. Am. Coll. Surg. 2007;204:533-40).

Dr. Greenberg and her associates identified "triggers" that should prompt residents or nurses to contact attending surgeons, including a patient’s admission to a hospital, discharge, or a visit to an emergency department, transfer into or out of the ICU, unplanned intubation, or the development of cardiac arrest, new arrhythmia, or hemodynamic instability.

"Developing skills in communication are as important as the development and maintenance of technical skills."

Significant neurologic changes, major wound complications, unplanned blood transfusion, an invasive procedure or operation, or errors in medication or treatment necessitating an intervention also should trigger communication with the attending surgeon. Even simply concern by a surgical trainee or a request from a nurse or another physician to contact the attending surgeon were considered triggers for communication.

The triggers were included in guidelines created by representatives of the four hospitals in Harvard University’s system in a collaboration organized by the system’s malpractice insurers. Under the new guidelines, residents were to notify attending surgeons of any significant changes in a patient’s condition regardless of the day or time. The residents would be trained to understand what qualifies as "significant changes" based in part on specialty-specific definitions, she said.

"What a urologist cares about is probably a little bit different from what a neurosurgeon or cardiac surgeon cares about," she explained.

A study of practices before instituting these policies found that residents thought that 61 of 80 critical patient events (76%) did not need to be communicated to attending surgeons for safe patient care, and 26 events were not communicated (33%). Of the 54 events that were communicated, discussions with the attending surgeons changed management in 18 cases (33%). Attending surgeons responded to calls 100% of the time (Ann. Surg. 2009;250:861-5).

"It wasn’t that the attendings didn’t want to be called. It was that residents either felt unempowered to call or they felt that it wasn’t necessary," she said.

After adoption of the new guidelines, only 1 of 47 critical events (2%) was not communicated to an attending surgeon, the current study found (Ann. Surg. 2011;253:849-54).

"Developing skills in communication are as important as the development and maintenance of technical skills" to reduce the risk of errors, Dr. Greenberg said.

Breakdowns in communication are common and play a significant role in adverse events, prior data suggest. One study of 48 surgeries found that 31% of 421 attempted communications between surgical team members failed, and approximately a third of these communication failures potentially jeopardized patient safety (Qual. Saf. Health Care 2004;13:330-4).

Other strategies to reduce the risk of errors during surgery include "workload leveling," Dr. Greenberg added. This means the attending surgeon should communicate frequently to members of the interdisciplinary surgical team about the status of the case and expected progression of the case, so that team members can manage their time and plan to do auxiliary tasks at the appropriate times.

It’s probably impossible to avoid all errors, so surgeons need to find the right balance of error prevention and error mitigation through "resilience" – the ability to anticipate, cope with, recover from, and learn from unforeseen developments, she added. "To start to increase resilience, we really need to teach people adaptability and flexibility," she said.

 

 

Dr. Greenberg said she has no relevant conflicts of interest.

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FROM THE ANNUAL CLINICAL CONGRESS OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS

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