Interprofessional Communication SBAR Module

Similar documents
Jefferson InterProfessional Education Center Interprofessional Communication SBAR Module

Disclosure. Mayo Clinic. Quality Gets You in the Game, Service Helps You Win ***** How to Give Great Care and Feel Better at the End of Your Day

What is Teamwork? Research Findings. Models of Team Performance Salas et al. What Teamwork IS and IS NOT (Salas et al)

Integrating Quality and Safety (QSEN) Content into Skills and Simulation Curricula

Exercise is Medicine Australia Education evaluation summary

Improving Healthcare Quality and Safety

CURRICULUM ON PRACTICE-BASED LEARNING AND IMPROVEMENT MSU INTERNAL MEDICINE RESIDENCY PROGRAM. Revision date: March 2015 TEC Approval: March 2015

6/10/2010 DISCLOSURES - NONE INTEGRATING QSEN COMPETENCIES INTO NURSING EDUCATION

Advancing Interdisciplinary Collaboration: Medical Students Partnering with Nurses

Tips and Strategies on Handoffs

How Are We Doing? A Hospital Self Assessment Survey on Patient Transitions and Family Caregivers

Case Studies Patient Centered Medical Home

Sutter Health, based in Sacramento, California and

Karen Frush, BSN, MD Chief Patient Safety Officer Duke University Health System October 23, 2009

Ambulatory Services (6850P)

Philips Hospital to Home: redefining healthcare. through innovation in telehealth

Health Literacy and Palliative Care Nursing Perspective

Assessment of Primary Care Resources and Supports for Chronic Disease Self Management (PCRS)

Standards of Practice for Patient Identification, Correct Surgery Site and Correct Surgical Procedure

AHA/ASA Support Network. Anne Vigil, MSN, RN SLUCare Cardiac Rehabilitation American Heart Association Volunteer

University Hospital Preoperative Patient Flow & Work Flow Analysis. Final Report

Developments in Advanced Practice Nursing Roles: US Perspective in Context of the HIV Epidemic

Interprofessional Collaboration

Delivering the Promise to Healthcare: Improving Patient Safety and Quality of Care through aviation-related Crew Resource Management (CRM) Training

PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS TRANSFORMING HEALTH CARE

SPECIALTY CASE MANAGEMENT

December Nursing Strategic Goal Focus: Innovation

Changing Clinical Behaviors to Lower Costs and Reduce Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections (CAUTI)

EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION is critical

DATA DRIVEN HEALTH CARE TRANSFORMATION

Improving Patient Safety with Team Training

DOs and DON Ts of Policy Writing

Presented by: Char Brar, ACNP, MS(Chem.), MSN, RN Cardiology Nurse Practitioner JBVAMC, Chicago

Transitions of Care: The need for a more effective approach to continuing patient care

Teaching the Science of Quality Improvement to Graduate Students: Practical Steps for Success. Michelle Freeman PhD, RN

Your Guide to Outpatient Surgery

10/31/2014. Medication Adherence: Development of an EMR tool to monitor oral medication compliance. Conflict of Interest Disclosures.

PIPC: Hepatitis Roundtable Summary and Recommendations on Dissemination and Implementation of Clinical Evidence

Person-Centered Nurse Care Management in Home Based Care: Impact on Well-Being and Cost Containment

Explore New Roads Gap Medical. May Insurance Broker Meeting September 2015

ELECTRONIC MEDICAL RECORDS (EMR)

THE READING HOSPITAL SPEAKERS BUREAU. Permit No Non-Profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID. Reading, PA

2015 Year Over Year HEALTHCARE JOBS SNAPSHOT. A quarterly report produced by Health ecareers

How to Fast-Track Your Meaningful Use Effort

How Incorporating EBP & CDS Can Improve Outcomes & Agency Efficiency

The Role of the Advance Practice Clinician (APC) in Pediatric Trauma Care

Mauro Calvano. About Aviation Safety Management Systems

A MANAGER S GUIDE: HOW BETTER NURSE TO PATIENT RATIOS CAN IMPROVE THE HEALTH OF YOUR PATIENTS & LOWER STAFFING COSTS.

Medication error is the most common

Medical Expertise Personal Attention Compassionate Care

The Journey of One Thousand Miles Begins with One Step

The Perils of Practice

Solution Series. Electronic Medical Records. Patient Portal

Running head: OBSERVATION PAPER 1

Improving Perinatal Safety: Managing Risk. Simulation User Network San Diego Dec 1-2, Teri Kiehn MS, RNC

New Models of Care and Approaches to Payment

What Is Patient Safety?

College of DuPage. Associate Degree Nursing Program

Objectives. Integrating Quality and Safety Throughout a Masters Entry to Nursing Practice Curriculum. The Institute of Medicine.

Leadership Summit for Hospital and Post-Acute Long Term Care Providers May 12, 2015

Medical Expertise Personal Attention Compassionate Care

Texas ereferral Project with Baylor Scott and White, Epic, Alere Wellbeing and University of Texas at Austin Update Date: October 2014

Spotlight on Success: Implementing Nurse-Driven Protocols to Reduce CAUTIs

A Guide to Patient Services. Cedars-Sinai Health Associates

Statement for the Record. Bernadette Loftus, MD. Executive-in-Charge, Mid-Atlantic Permanente Medical Group. Kaiser Permanente

ACS NSQIP The Role of Clinical Support. June 21, 2012 Ava Griffin, RN, CNOR Clinical Support Specialist

COURSE SPECIFIC INFORMATION

Patient Flow and Care Transitions Strategy Updated September 2014

IDENTIFYING CLINICAL RESEARCH QUESTIONS THAT FIT PRACTICE PRIORITIES. Module I: Identifying Good Questions

Unstoppable Report Removing a Barrier to Patient Flow by Nursing Process Redesign

Massachusetts Department of Higher Education. Nursing Education Redesign Grant Program. Final Project Implementation Report

Solution Title: Predicting Care Using Informatics/MEWS (Modified Early Warning System)

MSH Quality Improvement Plans (QIP): Progress Report for 2013/14 QIP

OB PBLD L117 Labor and Delivery in the Age of Ebola Upper 20B-20C. PI PBLD L120 He's 15, Needs This Operation, and He's DNR!

Members Why it was needed Work of the task force Survey Outcome

Accountable Care Organizations: From Promise to Progress

Telenursing and Remote Access Telehealth. Bonnie Westra, PhD, RN, FAAN, FACMI

Administering DTaP during the Shortage

The Physician s Guide to The Joint Commission s Hospital Standards and Accreditation Process

Survey of Nurse Employers in California 2015

Hypertension Best Practices Symposium

Global Lab for Innovation

Goals and Objectives Pediatric Surgery PGY 1 MCVH

M. Please itemize your historical visits (all) for the past five (5) years; and number of expected visits for this year.

Med Sync YOUR STEP-BY-STEP QUICK REFERENCE GUIDE

Creating ereferral in Texas for Healthcare Systems Using NextGen as an EHR

Readmissions as an Enterprise Priority. Presenters 4/17/2014

Running Head: WORKFLOW ANALYSIS 1. Workflow Analysis of a Primary Care Clinic Before and After Implementation of an Electronic Health Record

Physician-led health care teams

Madison L. Gates, PhD Assistant Professor University of Kentucky

Patients Perspectives on Hiking Through the Healthcare System: Measuring Patient Experience

A STRATIFIED APPROACH TO PATIENT SAFETY THROUGH HEALTH INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

Hand-Off Communications Targeted Solutions Tool (TST ) Implementation Guide for Health Care Organizations

Nurse to Patient Ratio Its Impact on Patient Safety. Zenei Cortez RN President California Nurses Association and National Nurses Organizing Committee

BSN, MN, & 11, :00 P.M.,

Simulation Evaluation: A Comparison of Two Simulation Evaluation Rubrics

DRIVING VALUE IN HEALTHCARE: PERSPECTIVES FROM TWO ACO EXECUTIVES, PART I

CAH CMS definition History Numbers OBJECTIVES 4/3/2013

Objectives. Kathleen Gallo Ph.D, MBA, RN, FAAN Senior Vice President Chief Learning Officer. Statement of the Problem.

Improving Handoff Communication. Lisa Brown, RN, BSN Melissa Emmons, RN, BSN Caroline Johnson, RN, MSN, CCRN Jennifer Keily, RN

Transcription:

Interprofessional Communication SBAR Module Adapted partially from Arizona Hospital and Healthcare Assoc Safe and Sound patient safety initiative http://www.azhha.org/patient_safety/documents/sbarto olkit_000.pdf

Communication by G Love & Special Sauce Blues and hip hop band originally from Philadelphia, PA I wanna know what your sayin' I wanna know what it's all about I want you to spell it out for me No I'm not a mind reader No I'm not a heart beater No I don't have ESP C-O-M-M-U-N-I-C-A-T... I-O-N (c'mon let's sing it now) communication, communication, communication with me

Objectives of session At the end of the session, participants will be able to: 1. Discuss the benefits of interprofessional communication and collaboration in enhancing patient care safety and outcomes. 2. Identify the SBAR method as an evidence based model. 3. Apply a communication technique using case scenarios.

Communication among health professionals What are some barriers to good communication in the health care setting? What are some facilitators to good communication in the health care setting?

BACKGROUND Some studies indicate that 70-80% of medical errors are related to interpersonal interaction issues. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality January 2004 http://www.ahrq.gov/research/jan04/0104ra25.htm It has been noted that in 63% of JCAHO sentinel event occurrences, communication breakdown is the leading root cause. Joint Commission Perspectives on Patient Safety, Volume 2, Number 9, September 2002, pp. 4-5(2)

BACKGROUND Poor communication has also been identified as the primary factor of both medical malpractice claims and major patient safety violations, including errors resulting in patient death. Hospitals and Health Network http://www.hhnmag.com/hhnmag_app/jsp/articledisplay.jsp?dcrpath=hhnm AG/Pubs NewsArticle/data /2006August

BACKGROUND One study found nurse/physician communication style was the leading predictor of patient mortality in intensive care units. Knaus et al, 1986, Annals on Internal Medicine

BACKGROUND Good collaboration between physicians and nurses was related to better patient outcomes in ICUs Baggs et al, 1992, Heart and Lung

BACKGROUND Another study demonstrated that the degree of collaboration between surgeons, anesthesiologists, and nurses correlates with risk-adjusted morbidity and mortality. Young et al, 1997, Health Care Management Review

Ambulatory chronic disease patients suffer preventable medical errors Patient Safety Monitor Alert, July 29, 2009 Journal on Quality and Patient Safety highlighted a study at UCSF that identified the gaps in the healthcare system to which ambulatory patients with chronic disease are exposed. They found that unlike in hospital settings in which patients are managed by a team of caregivers during their stay, ambulatory patients are often managed by many different caregivers with a lack of defined protocols. Additionally, the researchers found that medical errors sometimes occurred because of the lack of communication among ambulatory patients' health providers, as well as patients being unaware of their own medication regimens.

Patient Safety Monitor Alert (9/16/09) Patients of the future will demand increased communication and will be more informed consumers In the future, healthcare providers can expect more informed patients who want their care team members to be open to communicating via e-mail and other Internet platforms. They will also be more knowledgeable about potential treatment options, their own health records, and ask upfront about the costs that will be incurred with medical care.

The Joint Commission just released the 2010 National Patient Safety Goals (NPSG) early October 2009. The Joint Commission has included patient hand-offs as a part of its National Patient Safety Goals for years

Hand-off Communication A 2005 study found that nearly 70% of preventable hospital mishaps occurred because of communication problems and other studies have shown that at least half of such breakdowns occur during hand-offs.

The Wall Street Journal 6/28/06 For hospitals, the hand-off has long been the Bermuda Triangle of health care.

Examples of hand-off communications include: Transition of Care reports such as a PACU to Surgical Floor, CICU to Telemetry, Labor and Delivery to Post Partum and ED to medical floor Shift to Shift report; Charge Nurse to Charge Nurse Physician to Physician Health professional to health professional

JCAHO Joint Commission has issued several National Patient Safety Goals specific to communication, but they are not prescriptive in how to meet the goal. NPSG 2A through 2E deal with communication issues. 2E: Implement a standardized approach to hand off communications, including an opportunity to ask and respond to questions.

Hospital uses electronic medical record to improve hand-off process Patient Safety Monitor, April 1, 2009 Staff members at Abington (PA) Memorial Hospital (AMH) knew their hand-off process could use some work. Their process, like that of many other hospitals, used a paper form to communicate important patient information from one provider of care to the next often putting the patient at risk for an error in care. The hospital also needed to stay in compliance with National Patient Safety Goal 02.05.01, concerning hand-off communication. Additionally, nurses often had to double-document information on the hand-offs that was already captured in the electronic medical record (EMR). AMH had implemented computer physician order entry and clinical documentation by September 2007 and decided to utilize the EMR to enhance its hand-off process. We thought maybe we could use that type of technology to get better, more accurate information in a simple way to ancillary staff, says Diane Humbrecht, MSN, RN, C, nurse director of informatics at AMH.

Method to reduce hand offs In 2007, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles rolled out a universal floor during an expansion project. Cedars-Sinai s innovation has since lowered wait times for patients being admitted from the ED and elsewhere, reduced the number of patient safety events, and increased staff member satisfaction. A universal floor is one on which most patient consultations can take place. Rooms are created with multiple types of patient care in mind, and staff members are trained in many specialties to facilitate patients needs on one floor, reducing the need for patients to travel throughout the hospital.

JCAHO standard NPSG 2E: Implement a standardized approach to hand off communications, including an opportunity to ask and respond to questions. An example of a standardized approach is the SBAR method

SBAR S Situation: What is happening at the present time? B Background: What are the circumstances leading up to this situation? A Assessment: What do I think the problem is? R Recommendation: What should we do to correct the problem?

SBAR history SBAR has been used in several other high risk industries successfully and has an evidence-based background. Used in nuclear submarines in US Navy and used in the airline industry. Following investigation of airline crashes in 1970s, the primary cause was determined to be a breakdown in communication between the pilots in the cockpit. From then, the airline industry made a commitment to reduce airline accidents by developing a comprehensive safety program and SBAR is one component of this program.

Nurses comments on SBAR Veteran nurses use SBAR because it gives them permission to make a recommendation. It also reinforces the concept of we re a team and what I have to say is significant.

Newly Graduated Nurses comments on SBAR They appreciate SBAR because it is a tool that helps them become organized and more confident when discussing situations with others. Using SBAR guides them through a systematic communicative approach to organize their information.

Physician comments on SBAR When a nurse uses SBAR, physicians often say, This is great. The nurse gets straight to the point, has all the essential pieces of information and I know what they are asking for. The guessing game is omitted. Why is this? It may go back to training. Nurses are trained to write care plans more narrative in nature. Physicians, however, are trained to use headlines or bullet point notations. As a result, there are differing approaches when communicating.

SBAR introduction YouTube video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hadkcc 4pdMQ

Perinatal SBAR document Review the 30-60 second Perinatal SBAR form used at Holy Cross Hospital in Arizona. Shows examples of use with OB patients and Newborn/Pediatrics

Pediatric SBAR use locally Many of the local pediatric sites assigned for nursing pediatric rotation use a variation of SBAR for their communications/hand-offs. They use ISBARQ: I (Introduction) is for patient demographics and Q (Questions) is for clarification questions if needed.

Scenarios to practice in small groups Take turns being the speaker and the listener Use the SBAR practice sheets distributed (add info to scenario if needed) Begin all communications with: two identifiers in the process. For example, say This report is about Bob Henry, DOB 2/24/60 End all communications with: What questions do you have for me I am here until (insert time). If you have questions later on, call ext. and ask for me, (insert name).

Discussion What was the process like using the SBAR technique? What specifically did you learn about physician-nurse collaboration? Share a personal example of interprofessional communication that could have been positive or negative. Earlier we discussed barriers and facilitators to communication, do you have any additions to add to either barriers or facilitators? Based on today s session, how will you use SBAR in upcoming clinical rotations?

www.jeffline.jefferson.edu/jcipe THANK YOU