| Literature DB >> 33150394 |
Ari H Pollack1,2, Sonali R Mishra3, Calvin Apodaca4, Maher Khelifi4, Shefali Haldar4, Wanda Pratt3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Team situational awareness helps to ensure high-quality care and prevent errors in the complex hospital environment. Although extensive work has examined factors that contribute to breakdowns in situational awareness among clinicians, patients' and caregivers' roles have been neglected. To address this gap, we studied team-based situational awareness from the perspective of patients and their caregivers.Entities:
Keywords: design; patient care team; patient participation; situational awareness
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33150394 PMCID: PMC7883969 DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Med Inform Assoc ISSN: 1067-5027 Impact factor: 4.497
Participant characteristics
| Patients | |
|---|---|
| Sex | |
| Male | 13 |
| Female | 14 |
| Not specified | 1 |
| Age, y | |
| Pediatric | 12 (7-17) |
| Adult | 53 (18-76) |
| Caregivers | |
| Sex | |
| Male | 2 |
| Female | 15 |
| Not specified | 2 |
| Age | |
| 18-29 y | 1 |
| 30-39 y | 7 |
| 40-49 y | 6 |
| 50-59 y | 3 |
| Not specified | 2 |
| Race/ethnicity | |
| Hispanic/Latino | 6 |
| American Indian/Alaska Native | 2 |
| Asian | 5 |
| Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander | 1 |
| Black/African American | 7 |
| White/Caucasian | 30 |
Values are n or median (interquartile range).
Reasons to support team situational awareness
| Topic | Participant | Quote |
|---|---|---|
| Patient autonomy | AP01 | I don't want secrets. If you know something that has to happen or if you know something's happening, if you don't tell me, I have a real problem with that. This is my healthcare, not yours that you're talking about. This is me being affected, not you being affected, so let me know. |
| YC06 | I’m not here just to sign the paperwork. This is her life, our life, so I need to know what's going on. | |
| AP10 | Yeah. It’s good to know that they know what you want out of this outcome, what’s important to you. I understand what they’re trying to get done, but they need to know what I need and what’s important to me. Did we need all these procedures, did I need all these? They need to know what’s important to the patient and understand the patient, what makes the patient tick. | |
| Improve outcomes | YP06 | I would like to know how serious my illness just because—what was happening, and why I had diabetes, more specifics about it, so basically seeking it out like how dangerous low blood sugar is, and how much it actually affect me. I think without that knowledge, I probably wouldn't do as well at home. It would have taken a fairly long time for me to get stable. I think it's good to know how serious it is because—I really need to make sure I'm good at this |
| YC06 | Because for future decision making, if I understand why they're making a recommendation for something, it will help me make more decisions on my own going forward instead of having to call every two seconds—like what does [clinician] think? | |
| YC01 | From the time she was an infant, in order to get her home we had to learn how to care [for] her. So in order to even get her home, we had to know, we had to be active, we had to take a part. Otherwise [clinicians] wouldn’t feel confident in us, and part of how she got home—she had her transplant on [date] and we came home on [date] which is 17 days later. Which is very uncommon, but it was because her dad and I and my parents had taken an active role in taking care of her, wanting to know what meds she’s on, why she’s on them, when she’s got to take them, how to take them, and being that active participant. Otherwise she wouldn’t have come home. | |
| YP12 | Like say I wanted to start swimming exactly when I got out of the hospital and the doctors and nurses said that it would be bad for my health. [I don’t want to do anything] that they disagree with. | |
| Manage expectations | YC08 | Her IV for her antibiotics. I thought they were trying to figure out what kind of oral antibiotics to give her so that she can take them at home and then I found out today that that’s not even a possibility, it’s going to be that she’s going to have continue taking her antibiotics by IV. So that was the only change in plan that I wasn’t aware of until the GI doctors came in this morning. I was like—oh, you should have let me know, but at least I know now, not like the day we’re getting ready to go. Like oh, by the way, you’re not taking that pill, we’re just going to keep giving you the IV. |
| Create common goals | AP02 | And then I do know from experience it takes a team to—when you're treating a person or trying to help a person, it takes a team to do that, because I might not have all the answers or all the services that they need. I might have to like resource out for that. But here they have a team that has all that under one roof. And you see that. I don't know, it makes you feel more comfortable, I guess. More safe. |
| YC01 | Every once in a while, she gets infusions of what they call IVIG…and they had decided that they wanted to do an infusion last night. Which in and of itself it’s not that big, but they wanted to do it in conjunction with diuretics…So they wanted to start it at 9 and give her diuretics at midnight, and her dad and I are like that’s not okay for her to be up all night. She’ll be up all night going to the bathroom, that’s not fair to her. She needs to be able to get some rest. So can we change the plan? The doctor came in, we talked to him, and he listened to us, and they did it this morning in conjunction with diuretics like they wanted. It’s just they waited because we spoke up. |
Barriers to team situational awareness
| Topic | Participant | Quote |
|---|---|---|
| Perception barriers | ||
| Poor communication | YP11 | I went to the emergency room and they did some tests and then I told them some stuff and they kind of just ignored it. I was like, I give up, you're the doctors, I can't argue with you. And [they said] “you're fine, you can go home” and I was like “no, I'm not. I need to be put in,” and here I am. |
| AP13 | Like when I first went in with the migraines, they gave me Fentanyl and I told them it wasn't working, and so the lady says, “Oh, we'll just give you more this time.” And [they] gave me more. That wasn’t what I said, I said it wasn't working, can we try something different? I was trying to make it very plain, I was not just there chasing pain meds. And that was like communication stopped there. They had an idea what I was about, and that was pretty much it. Like the last time I was in the ER over there, they basically told me not to come back because I was wasting their time. | |
| Fear | YP12 | I just feel like if stuff gets worse, I don’t like to know about it. If it’s really dangerous to me I tend to not want to know about it |
| AP11 | They didn’t really give me a book, they just really told me everything, which I wish they wouldn’t have. I feel like half the stuff they told me that was probably going to happen that I was so terrified about didn’t happen, wasn’t going to happen, probably. | |
| Protect patients | YC11 | I mean, it's just hard—he knows things because he reads and he researches. But I guess you don't want them to know the reality of the true—it's a grim reality in many ways, so you try to shield them from that and keep them as healthy as you can. So he doesn't feel like—it's just that, not that I don't want him to know, but as he gets older he's going to learn these things and be there to talk with him about it, but I don't want him to say “hey, I just got my lung transplant. What do you mean I don't need a lung transplant?” So as he gets older, he's understanding more about it and he can learn, but not just to bombard him when he's little. |
| Comprehension barriers | ||
| Cognitive challenges | AP09 | Yeah, I'm still on morphine, but it was stronger in the beginning, so I mean the doctors need to give it to you I guess as often as you can, I just think everybody needs to be cognizant of the fact that I probably will need that information again when I'm more clear-headed, when the patient's more clear-headed, because it's especially—like to me kind of palpable that I have asked the same questions a few times. |
| Different interpretations | YC01 | Her temp usually runs in the 97 range and her temp got up to 99 and I told the evening nurse, “I think that’s a fever.” The nurse said “no, that’s not a fever, we don’t think a fever is until she gets to 100.” Well, the next morning it had spiked up to 103 degrees and she ended up having an infection on her port. If the nurse had listened to me the night before, could we have potentially caught it earlier? I think we could have. But she didn’t listen. So I think it’s very important that they listen to me as well as I listen to them |
| Blind trust | AP02 | He's a professional, it's not important I understand what he's saying because I understand he's saying it from facts and looking at my condition and stuff, so I don't need to know his reasoning and all that. I'm not a psychologist! |
| Projection barriers | ||
| Unrealistic expectations | YC03 | Last year it was actually her first time being admitted and I had no idea what to expect. Nobody had told us. In the 12 years that we've been dealing with cystic fibrosis, I honestly wasn't aware how long the CF clean-out was. So when she was admitted, I thought we were going to be here three nights maybe 2-3 nights, and when I came in and asked how long do we stay, and they told me two weeks, my heart just dropped. |
| AP03 | I'm supposed to go on dialysis a long time ago this year, and I refused to go, so then this happened. | |
Team situational awareness facilitators
| Topic | Participant | Quote |
|---|---|---|
| Patient expertise | YC05 | For example, like we let the doc know that [patient’s] having a difficult time eating and drinking and whatnot, he's feeling a little grumpy with the medicines…And then they can change it to make him more comfortable. For example they had a feeding tube in him to do the flush-out process and they said we got an option to keep the feeding tube in and then feed him the nutrient supplements that way or have him eat on his own, and [Patient] really wanted to be able to eat on his own and get that tube removed because he would be more comfortable, less in pain, a number of different reasons. They were like yeah, let's do the right thing for him, that he feels comfortable with. |
| Observation | AP10 | They sit here and they tell each other what’s been going on during the day, what kind of medications I’m on, what the doctors have said, what’s in some of the charts, what’s in some of the X-rays, what the plan is for the rest of the night. They do it every day, so some of the stuff that I might not have listened to and know, I get more information listening to them, because they’ve talked to the doctors or the doctors have talked to them and they may have to pass the information onto each shift |
| Repetition | YC05 | I feel more like they just really want us to know what's going on, and even though they're repeating what the other one said, they repeat it with another little twist, like a little bit extra information from their side, their specialty… So even though they're talking about the same thing, they have different approaches and then different information from their side of the experience. |
| Empathy and comfort | YC14 | They’ve been so great, and actually this is the only place where they talked to her like she’s an actual person here, she’s not just sidelined. And so it’s really cool. She gets to have a lot of say and they totally listen to her. She has a say in what’s going on. Like with the IV, she was super freaked about getting it flushed again because it hurt and they totally worked with her. So they were able to keep it open a different way. |
| AP03 | Sometimes you feel like—it could be a doctor visit in their office, I feel like they want to hurry, hurry, and then I totally avoid asking questions. But I feel comfortable with them, they really seem very concerned, then I don't feel rude and I want to ask more questions, like what does that mean? What is that pill's going to do to me? So when they use medical terms and I don't understand, I don't feel bad to ask them questions, if I don't understand it, they can explain what does that mean. |