| Literature DB >> 24188523 |
Molly Courtenay1, Susan Nancarrow, David Dawson.
Abstract
Approximately 70 to 80% of healthcare errors are due to poor team communication and understanding. High-risk environments such as the trauma setting (which covers a broad spectrum of departments in acute services) are where the majority of these errors occur. Despite the emphasis on interprofessional collaborative practice and patient safety, interprofessional teamworking in the trauma setting has received little attention. This paper presents the findings of a scoping review designed to identify the extent and nature of this literature in this setting. The MEDLINE (via OVID, using keywords and MeSH in OVID), and PubMed (via NCBI using MeSH), and CINAHL databases were searched from January 2000 to April 2013 for results of interprofessional teamworking in the trauma setting. A hand search was conducted by reviewing the reference lists of relevant articles. In total, 24 published articles were identified for inclusion in the review. Studies could be categorized into three main areas, and within each area were a number of themes: 1) descriptions of the organization of trauma teams (themes included interaction between team members, and leadership); 2) descriptions of team composition and structure (themes included maintaining team stability and core team members); and 3) evaluation of team work interventions (themes included activities in practice and activities in the classroom setting).Descriptive studies highlighted the fluid nature of team processes, the shared mental models, and the need for teamwork and communication. Evaluative studies placed a greater emphasis on specialized roles and individual tasks and activities. This reflects a multiprofessional as opposed to an interprofessional model of teamwork. Some of the characteristics of high-performing interprofessional teams described in this review are also evident in effective teams in the community rehabilitation and intermediate care setting. These characteristics may well be pertinent to other settings, and so provide a useful foundation for future investigations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24188523 PMCID: PMC3826522 DOI: 10.1186/1478-4491-11-57
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Resour Health ISSN: 1478-4491
Figure 1Search terms and study selection process.
Descriptive studies
| Anderson & Talsma, 2011 [ | OR | To determine how the operating room staffing of two surgical specialties compare in terms of social network variables | Examination of staffing data, using social network analysis | Data were collected from 4,356 general surgery cases and 1,645 neurosurgery cases | Team coreness was associated with length of case. Procedures starting later in the day were less likely to be staffed by a team with a high number of core members. RNs constituted the majority of core interdisciplinary team members |
| Arakelian et al., 2011 [ | OR | To study how organized surgical team members and their leaders understood operating room efficiency | | 11 (9 team members, 2 team leaders) | Seven ways of understanding operating room efficiency were identified |
| Cassera et al., 2009 [ | OR | Team size and effect on team performance | Retrospective case review | 360 laparoscopic procedures | Mean team size was eight members. Surgeons and anesthesiologists were constant team members, while the OR nurses changed more than once in each procedure. Surgery complexity and team size significantly affected PT; adding one person to the team increased PT by 15.4 minutes |
| Cole & Crichton, 2005 [ | ED | To explore the culture of a trauma team in relation to the influence that human factors have over its performance | Ethnography/interviews/observation | 6 periods of observation and 11 semi-structured interviews | Leadership, role competence, conflict, communication, environment, and patient status all influenced the culture of the trauma team |
| Creswick et al., 2009 [ | ED | To use social network analysis to measure communication patterns and staff interactions within an ED | Social network survey and social network analysis | 103 ED staff | Communication across the ED could be clearly understood in terms of three professional groups; interactions between individuals occurred mainly within professional groups |
| Gillespie et al., 2010 [ | OR | To extend understanding of the organizational and individual factors that influence teamwork in surgery | Grounded theory/interviews | 16 OR staff (surgeons, anesthetists and nurses) | Three themes described interdisciplinary teamwork practice: 1) contribution of interdisciplinary diversity to complex interpersonal relations; 2) the influence of the organization; 3) education |
| Leach et al., 2009 [ | OR | To describe the nature of surgical teams and how they perform in the OR, in otder to contribute to a broader knowledge about high-performing teams and high-reliability teams in healthcare settings | Qualitative/observational study and interviews | Field observations of 10 high complexity surgeries | Coordination type and degree of independent and interdependent coordination varied between the observed stages (n = 7) of the surgical process. Teams were mainly ad hoc. Teams were challenged by ‘hand-offs’ and role demands that interfered with the adaptive capacity of the team |
| Surgeries and face-to-face interview with 26 team members | |||||
| Lingard et al., 2004 [ | ICU | An exploration of the interaction between ICU team members | Focus groups | Seven focus groups, each lasting 1 hour, with nurses, resident groups, and intensivist groups | Perception of ‘ownership’ and the process of ‘trade’ were mechanisms by which team collaboration was achieved or undermined |
| Sakran et al., 2012 [ | Level 1 trauma center | To evaluate the relationship between the perception of leadership ability and efficiency of trauma patient care | Prospective observational study using a Campbell Leadership Descriptor Survey tool | 81 leadership surveys collected from 22 separate trauma patient resuscitation encounters | The trauma teams perception of leadership was associated positively with clinical efficiency |
| Sarcevic et al., 2011 [ | ED | To identify leadership structures and the effects of cross-disciplinary leadership on trauma teamwork | Ethnography/observation/interviews | 100 hours of observations at 60 trauma resuscitation events, and 16 interviews with team members | Identified five leadership structures under two categories: 1) solo decision-making and intervening models within intradisciplinary leadership; and 2) intervening, parallel, and collaborative models within cross-disciplinary leadership |
| Weller et al., 2008 [ | OR | To improve patient safety by gaining an understanding of OR team interaction, and to identify strategies to improve the effectiveness of the anesthesia team | Qualitative study/interviews following simulation of anesthesia crises | 20 telephone interviews | Limited understanding of roles and capabilities of team members, differing perceptions of roles and responsibilities, limited information-sharing between team members, and limited input among team members in decision-making |
| Zheng et al., 2012 [ | OD | Effect of surgical team size on team performance | Review of general surgery procedures over a 1 year period | Reviewed records of 587 procedures | Eight members per team on average. Half the team members were nurses. Surgery complexity and team size significantly affected PT; the addition of one team member predicted a 7 minute increase in PT |
OR, operating room; ED, Emergency department; ICU, intensive care unit; OD, operating department; RRT, rapid response team; LM, leadership and management; PT, procedure time.
Evaluative studies
| Bleakley et al., 2006 [ | OT | Whether a sustained complex educational intervention would result in incremental, longitudinal improvement in attitudes and values towards interprofessional teamwork | Quasi-experimental, pre-test and post- test measures (findings from round 2 of the intervention) | Three strands: 1) data-driven iterative education in human factors; 2) establishment of a local, reactive ‘close call’ incident-reporting system; 3) team self-review (briefing and debriefing across all teams) | All general, trauma, and orthopedic theaters within one teaching hospital and two small satellite units | Teamwork climate | Validated SAQ | Intervention group had a higher aggregate teamwork climate score |
| Bleakley et al., 2012 [ | OT | Whether a sustained complex educational intervention would result in incremental, longitudinal improvement in attitudes and values towards interprofessional teamwork | Pre-interventino and post-intervention (findings from round 3 of the intervention) | Three strands: 1) data-driven iterative education in human factors; 2) establishment of a local, reactive ‘close call’ incident = reporting system ; 3) team self-review (briefing and debriefing across all teams | All general, trauma, and orthopedic theaters within one UK teaching hospital and two small satellite units | Teamwork climate | Validated | Mean ‘teamwork climate’ scores improved incrementally and significantly |
| Brock et al., 2013 [ | Medical, nursing, pharmacy and physician assistant students at one university | For students to acquire effective interprofessional team communication skills | Pre-test/post-test | Didactic instruction on patient safety and TeamSTEPPS communication skills. Students divided into IP teams for three simulated exercises and debriefing (observer/participant role) (4 hour training block) | 149 students completed pre-test and post-test assessments | Attitudes towards team communication; attitude/knowledge/motivation/utility/SE towards IP skills; key communication behaviors; understanding; program evaluation | Validated TeamSTEPPS TAQ, AMUSE, self-report/Likert scale | Significant differences across all outcome measures |
| Capella et al., 2010 [ | Level 1 trauma center | Does trauma team training improve team behaviors in the trauma room? If so, does improved teamwork lead to more efficiency in the trauma room and improved clinical outcomes? | Pre-training/post-training intervention design | 2 hour didactic instruction (roles, responsibilities, TeamSTEPPS essentials (that is, communication tools)) and simulation in a learning center/simulation laboratory | 33 trauma resuscitations pre-training, 40 post-training | Assessment of team performance; clinical outcome and clinical timing data | Validated TPOT | Significant improvement in all teamwork domains. Significant improvements in some clinical timing/outcome measures |
| Catchpole et al., 2010 [ | Surgery (maxillofacial, vascular and neurosurgery) | The effects of aviation-style training on three surgical teams from different specialties | Prospective study before and after an intervention | 1 to 2 days class-based series of interactive modules (including teamwork, communication, leadership, basic cognition, SA, decision-making, briefing, and debriefing) followed by team coaching (value of briefing/debriefing) | 112 operations (51 before and 61 after the intervention) | Attitudes to safety and cultural context. Frequency of pre-list briefings, pre-incision time-outs/stop checks, post-case debriefing, and dimensions of team skills | SAQ; structured observations and validated NOTECHS method to classify team skills | Significantly more briefings, debriefings, and stop checks. No improvement in teamwork |
| Mayer et al., 2011 [ | Pediatric and surgical ICU’s | Implementation of TeamSTEPPS | Pre-training/post-training intervention design | Change team trained/coached front-line staff, comprising 2.5 hour training sessions and group training in practice (ad hoc rather than intact teams) | 12 attending physicians, 157 nurses, 90 respiratory therapists | Staff interviews, observations of teamwork, clinical timing data, clinical infection data, perception of safety culture, strengths/weaknesses of the unit, job satisfaction | TENTS, EOS, HSOPC, NDNQI | Significant improvements in team performance/perception of teamwork (12 month follow-up). Significant decrease in clinical timing |
| Miller et al., 2012 [ | Level 1 trauma center/ academic tertiary care center | An ISTSP could be implemented in the ED and this would improve teamwork and communication in the clinical setting | Pre-training/post-training intervention design involving all members of the trauma team | Standardized lecture that specified roles, responsibilities, order of tasks, andposition in resuscitation area followed by simulation (ad hoc teams) | 39 real trauma activations observed | Teamwork and communication | Validated clinical teamwork scale | Teamwork and communication improved, but effect not sustained after the program |
| Nielson et al., 2007 [ | Obstetrics | To evaluate the effect of teamwork training on the occurrence of adverse outcomes and process of care in labor and delivery | Cluster randomized controlled trial | Instructor training session: standardized teamwork training curriculum based on CRM, which emphasized communication and team structure. Instructor created ad hoc workplace teams | 1,307 personnel trained and 28,536 deliveries analyzed | Adverse maternal/neonatal outcomes; clinical process measures | Adverse outcome index | Training had no significant effect |
| Wallin et al., 2007 [ | Trauma | To evaluate the outcome of a CRM target-focused instructional strategy on team behavior and attitude | Prospective study | Simulation | 15 medical students; observations of 8 trauma scenarios in simulation classroom | Behavior performance, team attitude | Structured observation schedule | Improvement in observed team behavior. No attitude change |
| Weaver et al., 2010 [ | OR | Does TeamSTEPPS training meaningfully affect teamwork behavior in OR teams? Does this teamwork positively affect important outcomes such as patient safety culture? | Mixed model design with one between-groups factor and two within-groups factors | TeamSTEPPS training curricula, including a 4 hour didactic session (competency-based), including interactive role-playing activities | Three surgeons and their teams | Trainee reactions, trainee learning, behavior on the job, results (degree to which training affected safety/quality) | Questionnaire survey; TeamSTEPPS learning benchmark test; CATS observation tool; HSOPS; ORMQ | Positive results at all levels of evaluation |
| Wolf et al., 2010 [ | OR | MTT has been touted as a way to improve teamwork and patient safety in the OR | Post-training data collection | 1 day didactic modules for all staff, with video and role-play. Topics included human factors, communication, fatigue recognition, briefing/debriefing training | 4,863 MTT debriefings analyzed | Team functioning, case delays, case scores | Debriefing/briefing checklist | Case delays decreased and case scores increased; sustained at 24 months. Improved perception of patient safety and teamwork |
| Wisborg et al., 2006 [ | Trauma | To describe a team intervention and assess the feasibility of the intervention | Pre-training/post- training; intervention design | 3.5 hour didactic session (teamwork/cooperation/ communication skills) and practical training session for all trauma team members in practice using simulation and debriefing | 28 Norwegian hospitals and 2,860 trauma team members participated in the training | Evaluation of experience | Questionnaire | High perception of learning |
AMUSE, Attitude, Motivation, Teamwork, Self Efficacy; CRM, crew resource management; ED, emergency department; EOS, Employee Opinion Survey; HSOPC, Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture; ICU, Intensive Care Unit; IP, interprofessional; ISTS, In situ Trauma Simulation; MTT, medical team training; NDNQI, National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators; NOTECHS, no technical skills; OR, operating room; OT, operating theater; POT, Trauma Team Performance Observation Tool; SAQ, Safety Attitudes Questionnaire; SA, situational awareness; SE, self efficacy; TAQ, Teamwork Attitude Questionnaire; TeamSTEPPS, Team Strategies and Tools to Enhance Performance and Patient Safety; TENTS, Team Evaluation of Non-technical skills.