| Literature DB >> 24769672 |
Virginie Muller-Juge1, Stéphane Cullati2, Katherine S Blondon3, Patricia Hudelson4, Fabienne Maître3, Nu V Vu1, Georges L Savoldelli5, Mathieu R Nendaz6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Effective teamwork is necessary for optimal patient care. There is insufficient understanding of interactions between physicians and nurses on internal medicine wards.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24769672 PMCID: PMC4000227 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0096160
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Details of each case with their relative relevant diagnostic hypotheses*.
| Complaint | Non-urgent clinical case (Case 1) | Urgent clinical case (Case 2) |
| Dyspnoea | Exacerbation of severe COPD | Cardiac failure due to rapid atrial fibrillation in a COPD patient. Pulmonary embolism to rule out. |
| Melena | Upper gastro-intestinal haemorrhage without hemodynamic instability | Upper gastro-intestinal haemorrhage in an anticoagulated patient, with hemodynamic instability |
| Fever | Endocarditis due to infected peripherical catheter | Endocarditis due to infected peripherical catheter with sepsis and oliguria |
| Epigastralgia | Gastric ulcer | Inferior NSTEMI |
* COPD: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; NSTEMI: non-ST elevation myocardial infarction.
Statements allowing researchers to provide their overall impressions on characteristics of the team members and on the quality of patient management.
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| The roles are traditional (the resident prescribes, the nurse executes) |
| The resident-nurse pair works harmoniously during their interactions (absence of conflict, of aggressiveness, etc.) |
| The team is efficient in patient management |
| The resident-nurse pair has common goals on patient management |
| The resident assumes leadership of the patient management |
| The nurse assumes leadership of the patient management |
| The nurse listens attentively to resident |
| The resident listens attentively to nurse |
| The resident and nurse demonstrate a shared reasoning and shared decision making |
| The resident demonstrates autonomy in patient management |
| The nurse demonstrates autonomy in patient management |
* For each statement, the researchers gave their global impression about the absence, the partial presence, or the strong presence of each dimension and could additionally provide free comments.
Figure 1Overall characteristics of the interactions within resident-nurse pairs.
The pair functioning was generally considered rather traditional, with the residents taking the leadership more often than nurses and with the nurses executing medical prescriptions and assuming their own specific role regarding patient supervision and care. The pairs were globally autonomous, especially in non-urgent cases, there was a good team spirit, and the team members had common management objectives and managed the patients with good, although not always maximal, efficiency. Each line represents a different case: in blue the non-urgent case (Case 1) and in red the urgent case (Case 2). R: resident; N: nurse. 0: absence of the characteristic; 1: partial presence of the characteristic; 2: strong presence of the characteristic, as determined by consensus among the coders.
Figure 2Characteristics of selected resident-nurse pair interactions.
A. Pair 13. The presence of a leader in the team (Pair 13, Case 1) or of a truly shared leadership between the resident and the nurse (Pair 13, Case 2) was the first condition for teamwork quality across pairs. B. Pair 2. Leadership was a necessary but insufficient condition. It contributed to teamwork quality only if the leader or both members of the pair demonstrated sufficient autonomy (Pair 2, Case 1). C. Pair 5. Nurse leadership could vary within the same pair, depending on the case type. For example in Pair 5, the resident took the leadership in Case 1 and the nurse tended to stand back, but in the more urgent Case 2 the nurse took the leadership once it appeared that the resident had difficulty in doing so. Each line represents a different case: in blue the non-urgent case (Case 1) and in red the urgent case (Case 2). R: resident; N: nurse. 0: absence of the characteristic; 1: partial presence of the characteristic; 2: strong presence of the characteristic, as determined by consensus among the coders.
Residents’ and nurses’ expressions of leadership and autonomy.
| Expressions of leadership and autonomy | Examples |
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| Request for nurses’ opinion and involve them in patient management | (while on the phone with nurse) |
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| Give clear medical orders |
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| Call out results of exams | (after lung auscultation) |
| (while reading the electrocardiogram) | |
| Plan the sequence of actions |
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| Verify that medical orders are in progress |
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| Listen attentively to nurses | Observation by coders |
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| Collect information from the patient (history and clinical exam) | (speaking to the patient before the resident is paged) |
| Demonstrate comprehension of the situation and interest in its follow-up | (observation by the coders) The nurse looks at the blood gases results with the resident (Nurse 5 Case 2) or at the electrocardiogram (Nurse 8 Case 1) |
| Suggest and give their opinions |
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| Call out results of exams |
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| Verify the medical prescriptions |
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| Ask for a prescription or a precision on a given prescription |
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| Help the residents | (observation by the coders) The nurse opens the patient’s gown to help the resident auscultate the thorax. The nurse helps the resident lower or raise the patient’s bed (Nurse 5 Case 2, Nurse 10 Case 1, Nurse 13 Case 1) |
| Listen attentively to residents | Observation by the coders |
* i.v.: intravenous(ly).