Literature DB >> 25431834

Rapid response systems and collective (in)competence: An exploratory analysis of intraprofessional and interprofessional activation factors.

Simon Kitto1, Stuart Duncan Marshall, Sarah E McMillan, Bill Shearer, Michael Buist, Rachel Grant, Monica Finnigan, Stuart Wilson.   

Abstract

The rapid response system (RRS) is a patient safety initiative instituted to enable healthcare professionals to promptly access help when a patient's status deteriorates. Despite patients meeting the criteria, up to one-third of the RRS cases that should be activated are not called, constituting a "missed RRS call". Using a case study approach, 10 focus groups of senior and junior nurses and physicians across four hospitals in Australia were conducted to gain greater insight into the social, professional and cultural factors that mediate the usage of the RRS. Participants' experiences with the RRS were explored from an interprofessional and collective competence perspective. Health professionals' reasons for not activating the RRS included: distinct intraprofessional clinical decision-making pathways; a highly hierarchical pathway in nursing, and a more autonomous pathway in medicine; and interprofessional communication barriers between nursing and medicine when deciding to make and actually making a RRS call. Participants also characterized the RRS as a work-around tool that is utilized when health professionals encounter problematic interprofessional communication. The results can be conceptualized as a form of collective incompetence that have important implications for the design and implementation of interprofessional patient safety initiatives, such as the RRS.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Case study; collective competence; focus groups; interprofessional collaboration; rapid response system; socio-cultural factors

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25431834     DOI: 10.3109/13561820.2014.984021

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Interprof Care        ISSN: 1356-1820            Impact factor:   2.338


  5 in total

1.  Temporal patterns in vital sign recording within and across general hospital wards.

Authors:  Beryl Noë; Alison Bullock; John Frankish; Liam D Turner
Journal:  Resusc Plus       Date:  2022-05-21

Review 2.  Diurnal variation in the performance of rapid response systems: the role of critical care services-a review article.

Authors:  Krishnaswamy Sundararajan; Arthas Flabouris; Campbell Thompson
Journal:  J Intensive Care       Date:  2016-02-24

3.  Clinician Perspectives of Barriers to Effective Implementation of a Rapid Response System in an Academic Health Centre: A Focus Group Study.

Authors:  John Rihari-Thomas; Michelle DiGiacomo; Jane Phillips; Phillip Newton; Patricia M Davidson
Journal:  Int J Health Policy Manag       Date:  2017-08-01

Review 4.  Factors influencing the activation of the rapid response system for clinically deteriorating patients by frontline ward clinicians: a systematic review.

Authors:  Wei Ling Chua; Min Ting Alicia See; Helena Legio-Quigley; Daryl Jones; Augustine Tee; Sok Ying Liaw
Journal:  Int J Qual Health Care       Date:  2017-12-01       Impact factor: 2.038

5.  Why do healthcare professionals fail to escalate as per the early warning system (EWS) protocol? A qualitative evidence synthesis of the barriers and facilitators of escalation.

Authors:  M Ryan; M O'Neill; S M O'Neill; B Clyne; M Bell; A Casey; B Leen; S M Smith
Journal:  BMC Emerg Med       Date:  2021-01-28
  5 in total

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