Authors

  1. Wheeler, Kim K. MSN, RN, CNOR

Article Content

The Joint Commission reported that 70% of sentinel events were caused by communication breakdowns when the root cause was analyzed in more than 4,000 adverse events.1 That's the same number of daily estimated patient handoffs, which comes to 1.6 million per year, in a typical teaching hospital.2 The frequency of these handoffs increases the chance of losing a critical piece of information during transition. In fact, poor quality and incomplete handoffs play a role in 80% of preventable adverse events.2 The Joint Commission (TJC) responded to these statistics by requiring healthcare organizations to implement a standardized approach to handoff communications, including a face-to-face report that allows an opportunity to ask and respond to questions, minimize interruptions, and a verification process.3

 

Patient handoffs

Handoffs involve the transfer of essential information when the responsibility for care shifts from one healthcare provider (HCP) to another. When done effectively, there should be a seamless transition of critical information that results in continuity of patient care.4 As a result of the evolution and specialization of healthcare, patients are more likely to encounter a greater number of handoffs than in the past due to the increased number of clinicians involved in care.

 

The complexity and type of information, communication methods, and variety of HCPs caring for a patient are factors that influence handoff efficiency, and as a result, impact patient safety. According to the Institute of Medicine, safety failures often begin as a result of an inadequate handoff.5 Time constraints require nurses to quickly share essential information, but the way this information is communicated varies. Information that one nurse may view as inconsequential may be interpreted differently by another nurse. Using a standardized format ensures that the information is consistently communicated.

 

Perioperative handoffs

The OR is one of the most complex work environments in the healthcare setting and presents handoff challenges with an average of 4.8 handoffs per case during the intraoperative phase alone.6 Even during a simple surgical procedure, the OR nursing staff may hand off the care of a patient 2.8 times if a perioperative nurse goes on break during the procedure.6 Longer and more complicated cases may have up to 7 handoffs when breaks and shift changes are considered.6

 

Throughout the entire perioperative process, the surgical patient can be more susceptible to handoff errors due to the number of checkpoints and transitions that occur. Each of the perioperative phases offers various factors and environmental distractions that can increase the potential for errors. However, handoffs don't have to be viewed as risk factors; an effective handoff provides an opportunity for fresh eyes to detect potential errors and to collaborate and improve the quality of patient care.

 

Solutions and strategies

Handoffs are a fundamental element of clinical practice, yet there's little research available regarding what constitutes best practice. Provider communication during a handoff should be a coordinated effort among all professionals involved in the changeover of patient care.7

 

Standardized handoff tools. While TJC requires implementation of a standardized process to help guide the transfer of critical information, it doesn't state which process must be used, leaving organizations free to choose or develop their own. To that end, there are a variety of protocols and strategies from other industries that can be adapted for use in healthcare. Many of them include the use of simple phonetic and numeric clarifications to help ensure that information is being accurately conveyed.

 

The Association of periOperative Registered Nurses offers a tool kit that includes provider resources for effective handoff communication in the perioperative environment.8 Examples of a standardized framework include the SBAR (Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendations) communication technique and the I PASS the BATON tool. In addition to the standardized format, the handoff must involve face-to-face communication (with both or all parties taking responsibility for ensuring accurate communication), verbal and written communication, and adequate time to ensure accuracy of communication.9 (See "I PASS the BATON" mnemonic for handoffs and healthcare transitions.)

 

Another tool available to assist with this requirement is the "talk back" method, which is similar to the "teach back" methodology used for patient education. Using the "talk back" method, the receiving party repeats the information back, thereby confirming its accuracy. This positive feedback mechanism facilitates two-way communication and ensures nothing is lost in the transfer of care.10

 

Electronic health record (EHR). Technology now plays a part in standardizing handoff communication with the expansion of EHRs. In spite of the criticism that information technology may be dehumanizing, it has the ability to enhance communication by allowing greater efficiency, accountability, and data completeness. This improved communication and efficiency allows nurses to spend more time in patient-care activities.11 Information technology, through the use of EHRs, is able to pull or extract data from one entry into other fields. This feature allows the nurse to populate or document once and create a standardized report sheet or tool from the preselected and relevant data already embedded in the record.11

 

HCPs can learn from teams outside of healthcare. For example, Formula 1 racing teams' approach for handoffs involves proactive learning with briefings and checklists to prevent errors, active management using technology to transfer information, and learning from the storage and analysis of EHRs.12 One hospital applied these principles and significantly reduced the number of omissions of information and technical errors in patients transferred from the OR to the ICU.12 Prior to implementation at this facility, the perioperative nurse and anesthesia provider gave separate reports, resulting in gaps and misinterpretation of information. Now the entire team (surgeon, anesthesia provider, and perioperative and ICU nurses) are present during the handoff to allow questions to be answered in real time.12

  
Table I PASS the BAT... - Click to enlarge in new windowTable "I PASS the BATON" mnemonic for handoffs and healthcare transitions

Barriers

TJC's goal seems a simple one, however, it's challenging to develop and implement effective strategies for standardized handoffs across various healthcare settings given the complexity of healthcare delivery. Culture influences the effectiveness of all communication. Nurses must recognize that communication isn't a single function, but rather a means to achieve multiple roles in distributed work. Overconfidence and complacency are common issues and should be discouraged by setting standards of communication and developing individual and organizational interaction skills.

 

Standardization can enhance handoffs by providing an opportunity to restructure how they're conducted.13 In high-reliability organizations outside of healthcare, handoffs occur the same way every time. However HCPs may do it differently every time, not because they don't care, but because they believe that their way works best. It might work, but the inconsistencies in care across the organization can risk patient safety.

 

The role of nurse leaders

It's important to remember that checklists, protocols (SBAR, I PASS the BATON), and the use of EHRs only guard against unintentional slips or errors. Leaders must be aware that protocols and checklists don't address other risk factors, such as professional disrespect or shortcuts and workarounds.14 Nurse leaders play a critical role in implementing processes that help to clearly define the transfer of responsibility from one HCP to another, standardize the communication process, and allow for an interactive exchange between all parties involved. The promotion of a standardized reporting tool must come from the leadership team. Without buy-in and monitoring from key leaders, nonadherence, rather than lack of knowledge, becomes the greatest barrier to effective handoffs.

 

Changing communication processes requires a relearning process. Simulation is an effective learning tool to improve the quality of handoff communication and foster team building.15 Historically, the focus has been on communication styles rather than the relationship aspect of handoffs. However, to communicate effectively, HCPs also need to have a working relationship that's built on trust with the individuals involved in the transfer.16 Nurse leaders need to empower nurses, physicians, and staff to be proactive with communication and collaboration to facilitate positive patient outcomes throughout the healthcare continuum.

 

REFERENCES

 

1. Halverson AL, Casey JT, Andersson J, et al. Communication failure in the operating room. Surgery. 2011;149(3):305-310. [Context Link]

 

2. O'Reilly KB. Joint Commission quality initiative reduces poor patient handoffs. http://www.ama-assn.org/amednews/2010/11/01/prsd1104.htm. [Context Link]

 

3. Riesenberg LA, Leitzsch J, Cunningham JM. Nursing handoffs: a systematic review of the literature. Am J Nurs. 2010;110(4):24-34. [Context Link]

 

4. Patterson ES, Wears RL. Patient handoffs: Standardized and reliable measurement tools remain elusive. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2010;36(2):52-61. [Context Link]

 

5. Kohn L, Corrigan J, Donaldson M. To Err Is Human. Builidng a Safer Health System. Washington, DC: National Academy Press; 2000. [Context Link]

 

6. Friesen MA, White SV, Byers JF. Handoffs: implications for nurses. In: Hughes RG, ed. Patient Safety and Quality: An Evidence-Based Handbook for Nurses. AHRQ; 2008. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK2649. [Context Link]

 

7. Amato-Vealey EJ, Barba MP, Vealey RJ. Hand-off communication: a requisite for perioperative patient safety. AORN J. 2008;88(5):763-770. [Context Link]

 

8. Association of periOperative Registered Nurses and U.S. Department of Defense Patient Safety Program. Patient hand-off tool kit: sample patient hand-off tools. http://www.aorn.org/PracticeResources/ToolKits/PatientHandOffToolKit. [Context Link]

 

9. Haig KM, Sutton S, Whittington J. SBAR: a shared mental model for improving communication between clinicians. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2006;32(3):167-175. [Context Link]

 

10. Patient handoffs can always be improved. J Healthc Risk Manage. 2009;31(9):105-107. [Context Link]

 

11. Simpson RL. Caring communications: how technology enhances interpersonal relations, part I. Nurs Adm Q. 2008;32(1):70-73. [Context Link]

 

12. Saver C. Handoffs: what ORs can learn from formula one race crews. OR Manager. 2011;27(4):1, 11-13. [Context Link]

 

13. Perry SJ, Wears RL, Patterson ES. High-hanging fruit: improving transitions in health care. In: Henriksen K, Battles JB, Keyes MA, et al., eds. Advances in Patient Safety: New Directions and Alternative Approaches. Vol 3: Performance and Tools. AHRQ; 2008. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK43656. [Context Link]

 

14. Maxfield D, Grenny J, McMillan R, Patterson K, Switzler A. Silence Kills. The Seven Crucial Conversations for Healthcare. VitalSmarts, L.C.; 2005. http://www.silenttreatmentstudy.com/silencekills/SilenceKills.pdf. [Context Link]

 

15. Clancy CM. The importance of simulation: preventing hand-off mistakes. AORN J. 2008;88(4):625-627. [Context Link]

 

16. Runy LA. Patient handoffs: the pitfalls and solutions of transferring patients safely from one caregiver to another. Journal of Healthcare Management. 2013. http://www.hhnmag.com/hhnmag/jsp/articledisplay.jsp?dcrpath=HHNMAG/Article/data/. [Context Link]