| Literature DB >> 34787545 |
Zahir Kanjee1,2, Christine P Beltran3, C Christopher Smith1,2,4, Jason Lewis2,5, Matthew M Hall6,7, Carrie D Tibbles2,3,8,9, Amy M Sullivan2,3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Patient handoffs from emergency physicians (EP) to internal medicine (IM) physicians may be complicated by conflict with the potential for adverse outcomes. The objective of this study was to identify the specific types of, and contributors to, conflict between EPs and IM physicians in this context.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34787545 PMCID: PMC8597691 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2021.7.52762
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Figure 1Patient admission process from ED to IM floor. This hospital has designed an electronic signout communication process (e-signout) between EM physicians and admitting physicians through an electronic ED dashboard system. EM attendings decide on need for admission, notify admitting office. Admitting office assigns inpatient bed/team, notifies accepting IM physician via admission page. IM physician (either resident on teaching service, or hospitalist attending on non-teaching service) reviews e-signout and either accepts admission (86% of cases, in which case patient is transferred to IM service) or initiates discussion (14% of cases, in which case a “red MD” notification appears on dashboard and EM resident is notified of need for discussion). If “red MD” case, EM resident and IM resident/attending discuss concerns. If issue is resolved, patient is transferred to IM service. If not resolved, discussion rises to EM attending/IM attending telephone discussion (rare). Issue is either resolved and patient is transferred to IM service or disposition is changed.
EM, emergency medicine; IM, internal medicine; MRN, medical record number; ED, emergency department.
Characteristics of focus group participants (n = 35).
| Characteristic | Total |
|---|---|
| Department | |
| Internal Medicine (IM) | 17 (48.6) |
| Emergency Medicine (EM) | 18 (51.5) |
| Respondent group | |
| IM resident | 11 (31.4) |
| EM resident | 13 (37.1) |
| IM attending | 6 (17.1) |
| EM attending | 5 (14.3) |
| Resident Postgraduate Year (PGY) | |
| PGY 1 | 2 (5.71) |
| PGY 2 | 10 (28.6) |
| PGY 3 | 12 (34.3) |
| Attending number of years as faculty | |
| ≤ 5 years as faculty | 6 (17.1) |
| > 5 years as faculty | 5 (14.3) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 20 (57.1) |
| Female | 15 (42.9) |
Internal medicine and emergency physician perspectives related to disposition decisions (whether patients require admission at all, whether patients should go to the ICU rather than the IM service, or whether additional testing is necessary before transfer to the floor).*
| Topic/perspectives | Representative IM quotes | Representative EM quotes |
|---|---|---|
IM resident #1, FG C | EM resident #3, FG G | |
IM resident #6, FG A | EM resident #3, FG D | |
IM attending #1, FG E | EM resident #3, FG D EM resident #5, FG D | |
IM attending #2, FG B | EM resident #6, FG G | |
IM resident #8, FG A | EM resident #1, FG D | |
IM resident #8, FG A | EM attending #2, FG F |
Bolded sections added for emphasis.
IM, internal medicine; EM, emergency medicine; ED, emergency department; ICU, intensive care unit; FG, focus group.
Internal medicine and emergency medicine perspectives on contextual issues that drive interdepartmental conflict.*
| Topic/perspectives | Representative IM quotes | Representative EM quotes |
|---|---|---|
IM attending #2, FG B IM resident #7, FG A | EM resident #1, FG G EM resident #4, FG D | |
IM residents #2, FG C | EM attending # 1, FG H | |
IM resident #7, FG A IM attending #1, FG B | EM resident #3, FG G | |
IM resident #7, FG A | EM attending #2, FG F EM attending #1, FG I | |
IM resident #7, FG A | EM attending #2, FG F |
Bolded sections added for emphasis.
IM, internal medicine; EM, emergency medicine; ED, emergency department; FG, focus group.
Problems and recommendations at individual and department/hospital level for reducing emergency/internal medicine physician conflict and enhancing collaboration.
| Problem | Individual level recommendation | Department/hospital level recommendation | Comment/rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Emergency and IM physicians do not have shared understanding of reason for admission (eg, need for intravenous medications, lack of social supports, diagnostic uncertainty), especially when patients were seen by an emergency physician who has since completed their shift (T) | Emergency physicians routinely document specific reason for admission. | Change e-signout template to include specific reason for necessity of disposition decision (rather than alternatives such as home or ICU). | Prevents misunderstandings/disagreements between emergency and IM physicians. |
| Disposition decisions around need for admission or ICU are sometimes debatable (T) | Emergency and IM physicians work together to create pathways and disposition rulesa. | Create pathways and disposition rulesa. | Allows input/expertise of each department in decisions, creates clarity, partially removes these decisions from contentious discussions, capitalizes on complementary inter-departmental knowledge bases. |
|
| |||
| Disposition discussions approached with defensiveness (R) | Emergency and IM physicians approach each other with curiosity and open-mindedness rather than defensiveness. | Implement interdisciplinary teamwork, conflict negotiation and mitigation training. | Transforms discussion requests from potentially contentious disagreements to satisfying opportunities for interdisciplinary, patient-centered problem solving. |
| Physicians do not know each other well personally (R) | Emergency and IM physicians attend joint social eventsa and engage in small talk when able. | Organize joint social eventsa and trainings. | Facilitates respectful interactions and teamwork. |
| Physicians do not understand each other’s workflows and priorities well (P) | Emergency and IM physicians ask each other about their priorities and concerns when working together. | Organize joint trainings, | Enhances each group’s appreciation of the downstream consequences of their own actions on their counterparts’ lives and work, allowing for emphasis of shared values. |
| Inpatient demands and inpatient volume make interactions with emergency physicians harder for IM physicians (R) | Reduce strain of admitting and caring for inpatients, eg, through changes to call schedules and geographic admitting, pharmacist involvement in medication reconciliation, streamlined outside record acquisition processes, reduced clinical documentation requirements, | Reduces strain that challenges IM physicians’ relationships with emergency physicians. | |
| Communication with IM physicians via page/phone is challenging for emergency physicians (P) | IM physicians always provide information on what they need in page for request for more information. | Implement two-way text paginga. | Reduces disruption to emergency physician workflow. |
| Prolonged ED boarding time strains EM/IM interactions (R) | Reduce ED overcrowding and boarding, eg, through strategies such as flexibility in nursing resources, | Decreases emergency physician stress, makes revisiting admissions decisions easier, reduces likelihood of needing to revisit admission decision made by an off-service emergency physician colleague, and makes discussions with/fulfilling additional requests from IM physicians easier. | |
| Notification of request for information/discussion is perceived as primarily negative by emergency physicians and so is “triggering” (P, R) | IM physicians use request for discussion/information system also to pass on positive feedbacka. | Adjust e-signout system to include a way to easily provide and encourage positive interdisciplinary feedback. | Makes requests less triggering. |
Superscript “a” denotes respondent recommendation.
IM, internal medicine; EM, emergency medicine; T, task conflict; P, process conflict; R, relationship conflict.
Figure 2Differences in perspectives regarding disposition decisions result in task, process, relationship conflict between internal medicine physicians and emergency physicians at patient handover. Contextual factors contribute to or exacerbate conflict.
ED, emergency department; EM, emergency medicine; ICU, intensive care unit; IM, internal medicine