| Literature DB >> 28707273 |
Lisa Anne Calder1,2,3, George Mastoras4, Mitra Rahimpour5, Benjamin Sohmer6, Brian Weitzman4, A Adam Cwinn4, Tara Hobin5, Avi Parush5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In order to enhance patient safety during resuscitation of critically ill patients, we need to optimize team communication and enhance team situational awareness but little is known about resuscitation team communication patterns. The objective of this study is to understand how teams communicate during resuscitation; specifically to assess for a shared mental model (organized understanding of a team's relationships) and information needs.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac arrest; Communication; Emergency department; Resuscitation; Situational awareness; Teams; Trauma
Year: 2017 PMID: 28707273 PMCID: PMC5509566 DOI: 10.1186/s12245-017-0149-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Emerg Med ISSN: 1865-1372
Roles and goals of resuscitation team members described during 18 interviews
| Role, N | Goals |
|---|---|
| Attending emergency physician, 4 | • Provide the best care in a timely organized manner that is safe for the patient |
| Trauma team leader, 2 | • Keep patient alive, treat any presenting injury in the best way possible, as quickly as possible |
| Charting nurse, 1 | • Have a complete oversight of the whole resuscitation situation, ensuring that all critical information, times, interventions, medication administrations and specialist involvement are documented for patient and hospital records |
| Task nurse (intravenous access), 1 | • Efficiently and effectively gain IV access on the patient upon arrival and obtain, send and receive laboratory work and results expediently |
| Task nurse (monitor), 1 | • Efficiently and effectively hook up the patient to monitors upon arrival |
| Emergency medicine resident, 2 | • Participate in the treatment and management of the patient to obtain further experience in emergency situations |
| Respiratory therapist, 2 | • To help the patient achieve a clear airway |
| Administrative clerk, 2 | • Quickly and efficiently page for or locate any supplies, services or devices required for the physicians and nurses to effectively manage and treat the patient |
| Patient care assistant, 1 | • Quickly and efficiently moving or transferring the patient to appropriate location, being “hyper aware” for any missed injuries or contusions on the patient’s body |
| Social worker, 1 | • Working in parallel alongside the resuscitation team as both the patient’s and family member’s advocate, being the family members eyes and ears in the trauma situation. |
| Paramedic, 1 | • Safely transport the patient to the care of the hospital with all the information that has directed care up until that point and will continue to direct care when the hospital team takes over |
Fig. 1Swim lane representation of event sequence flow for resuscitation from 18 interviews
Fig. 2Social network representations of resuscitation team-based communication
Characteristics of 30 observed simulated resuscitations
| Type of case | Number of simulated resuscitations | Number of participants (median, range) | Duration (min) of simulation (median, range) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cardiac arrest | 21 | 3, 3–7 | 11.5, 4–28 |
| Trauma | 4 | 5, 3–8 | 16, 4–29 |
| Sepsis | 1 | 4, – | 14, – |
| Status epilepticus | 2 | 3, 3–3 | 10.5, 9–12 |
| Respiratory failure | 1 | 4, – | 16, – |
| Anaphylaxis | 1 | 5, – | 9, – |
Key information category themes from each method
| Interviews ( | Simulated observations ( | Live observations ( | Final consensus categories |
|---|---|---|---|
| Time | Time (included time since last epinephrine, duration of cardiopulmonary resuscitation and “cycling” or frequency of blood pressure monitoring) | Resuscitation status (patient status and time elapsed) | Time |
| Vital signs | Patient statusa | Vital Signs | Patient statusa |
| Patient assessment | History (included allergy status, “down time” and mechanism of injury) | History | History |
| Medications | Medications | Treatments | Interventionsb |
| Investigations | Investigations (included x-ray, computed tomography and bloodwork) | Investigations | Assistance and consultations |
| Interventions | Interventions | Clinical findings | Team members present |
| Team members present | Treatments | Intravenous access | |
| Assistance requests and consultations | Equipment | ||
| Codes (included activation of the trauma team, cardiac catheterization lab and security team for violent patients) |
aIncludes vital signs
bIncludes medications, investigations, treatment
Characteristics of 12 observed live resuscitations
| Type of case | Number of resuscitation cases | Patient age (median, range) | Patient sex, male ( | Number of ED resuscitation team members (median, range) | Duration (min) of observed resuscitation (median, range) | Outcomes | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Death | ICU/CCU* | OR**/cardiac catheterization | Ward | ||||||
| Cardiac arrest | 5 | 73, 56–84 | 5 | 10.0, 7–14 | 17, 6–32 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| Trauma | 3 | 36, 18–68 | 2 | 12.0, 11–13 | 13, 13–32 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| Sepsis | 2 | 86, 78–93 | 1 | 8.5, 7–10 | 52.5, 47–58 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| Status epilepticus | 1 | 42, – | 0 | 6 | 15 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Respiratory failure | 1 | 54, – | 1 | 9 | 26 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
ICU intensive care unit, CCU coronary care unit, OR operating room