| Literature DB >> 25332710 |
Dominik Choromanski1, Joel Frederick2, George Michael McKelvey3, Hong Wang2.
Abstract
Currently, no reported studies have evaluated intraoperative handover among anesthesia providers. Studies on anesthetic handover in the US recovery room setting observed that handover processes are insufficient and, in many instances, significant intraoperative events are disregarded. An online survey tool was sent to anesthesia providers at US anesthesia residency programs nationwide (120 out of the 132 US programs encompassing around 4500 residents and their academic MDAs) and a smaller survey selection of CRNAs (10 institutions about 300 CRNAs in the metropolitan area of Detroit, MI, USA) to collect information on handover practices. The response rate to this survey (n = 216) was comprised of approximately 5% (n = 71) of the resident population in US anesthesia programs, 5% (n = 87) of MDAs , and 20% (n = 58) of the CRNAs. Out of all respondents (n = 212), 49.1 % had no hand-over protocol at their institution and 88% of respondents who did have institutional handover protocols believed them insufficient for effective patient handover. In addiiton, 84.8% of all responders reported situations where there was insufficient information received during a patient handover. Only 7% of the respondents reported never experiencing complications or mismanagement due to poor or incomplete hand-overs. In contrast, 60% reported rarely having complications, 31% reported sometimes having complications, and 3% reported frequent complications. In conclusion, handover transition of patient care is a vulnerable and potentially life-threatening event in the operating room. Our preliminary study suggests that current intraoperatvive handover practices among anesthesia providers are suboptimal and that national patient handover guidelines are required to improve patient safety.Entities:
Keywords: anesthesiology; health care surveys; patient handover; patient safety; postoperative care
Year: 2014 PMID: 25332710 PMCID: PMC4197389 DOI: 10.7555/JBR.28.20140001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Res ISSN: 1674-8301
Survey responses from question 8 of the intraoperative handover questionnaire
| Survey question | MDAR | CRNA | MDA |
| Which group of anesthesia providers do you belong to? | 40.3% | 32.9% | 26.9% |
MDAR-Medical Doctor of Anesthesiology Resident, CRNA- Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist, MDA-Medical Doctor of Anesthesiology.
Survey responses from questions 1, 2, 3 and 6 of the intraoperative handover questionnaire
| Survey question | Yes | No |
| Does your Department have a hand over protocol? | 50.9% | 49.1% |
| Does this Departmental handover policy define the necessary elements that you believe should be included during hand overs? | 11.2% | 88.2% |
| Do you use a standardized hand over form when taking over a case from another provider? | 14.3% | 85.7% |
| Have you ever felt that you have not received enough patient hand over information when taking over a case? | 15.2% | 84.8% |
Survey responses from question 7 of the intraoperative handover questionnaire
| Survey question | Never | Rarely | Sometimes | Frequently |
| How often have you experienced complications or mismanagement due to poor or incomplete hand-overs? | 7.4% | 59.6% | 30.5% | 2.5% |
Fig. 1Survey question 4.
On a scale from 1–5, how frequently do you cover the following patient information during the hand-over? Key - (1 = Never, 2 = Rarely, 3 = Sometimes, 4 = Frequently, 5 = Always. Patient information factors expressed as a % proportion of total survey response.
Additional patient information that survey respondants suggested for an effective handover; responses from survey question 5 (n = 39 responses/216 total survey responses)
| Suggested additional patient information | Responses/total responses |
| Anesthesiologist covering room | 3/39 |
| Baseline vital signs | 2/39 |
| Previous anesthesia related complications (i.e. PONV, MH, etc.) | 2/39 |
| Important family and psycho-social elements | 12/39 |
| IV access / lines | 15/39 |
| Total IV fluids | 11/39 |
| Antibiotics re-dosing time | 3/39 |
| Patient positioning | 2/39 |
| Anticipated time until end of surgery | 4/39 |
| Post-op pain management / concerns | 6/39 |
PONV: post-operative nauseaand vommitting; MH: malignant hyperthermia; IV: intravenous.