| Literature DB >> 19439048 |
Nick Sevdalis1, Stephen J Brett.
Abstract
Effectiveness and efficiency of care of the critically ill patient are subject to a number of systemic influences, including skills of individual physicians/nurses (technical and non-technical), team-working in the intensive care unit (ICU), and the ICU environment. We first discuss the paper of Fackler and colleagues as a contribution to the systems approach to clinical performance in the context of intensive care. We then highlight features of care delivery that are unique to intensive care and discuss the need for better understanding of human and non-human elements of the system of care of the critically ill patient as a driver for improvement of care delivery.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19439048 PMCID: PMC2689507 DOI: 10.1186/cc7787
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Figure 1Systems approach to clinical performance and error applied to surgery. OR, operating room. Reprinted from British Journal of Medical and Surgical Urology, Vol 2/edition number 1, Shabnam Undre, Sonal Arora and Nick Sevdalis, Surgical performance, human error and patient safety in urological surgery, Pages No.9, Copyright (2009), with permission from Elsevier [3].
Systems approach applied to intensive care
| System components | Evidence from the paper of Fackler | Evidence from other sources (sample) |
| Individual skill (technical and non-technical) | Technical: | |
| 1. Pattern recognition | ||
| Non-technical: | Non-technical skills in intensive care [ | |
| 2. Management of uncertainty | * Task management | |
| 3. Creation and transfer of stories | * Teamworking | |
| * Situation awareness | ||
| * Decision-making | ||
| Teamwork and communication | 4. Team coordination | Assessment of teamwork in critical care [ |
| 5. Team communication | ||
| 6. Fragmentary teams | Assessment of communication in ICU staff [ | |
| 7. Shifting teams | * Aspects of communication: openness, timeliness, and accuracy | |
| 9. Role ambiguity | * Interactions between leadership (by doctors and nurses) and communication | |
| Communication as a source of error [ | ||
| ICU environment | 8. Increasing shift handovers | Physical, emotional, and professional environment in ICUs [ |
| 10. External collaborators | ||
| Task interruptions in ICU doctors and nurses and potential for error [ | ||
ICU, intensive care unit.