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Junior Doctor Perceptions of Clinical Handover the impact of efficiency , education and senior clinician facilitation. Dr Hamish Dunn Dr Joanna Dargan Dr Lucy Cho. Background. Role of poor communication in sentinel events Increasing international focus
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Junior Doctor Perceptions of Clinical Handover the impact of efficiency, education and senior clinician facilitation Dr Hamish Dunn Dr Joanna Dargan Dr Lucy Cho
Background • Role of poor communication in sentinel events • Increasing international focus • Need for structural and organizational support • WHY JMOs? • Inexperienced • Communication quality and content • Lack of standardised protocols • Fatigued clinicians • Paucity of evidence – especially from JMO perspective
Methods • Qualitative study • JMO-led focus groups • semi-structured individual interviews • in-depth supplement to the broader concept evaluation of the NSW Acute Care Taskforce: JMO Clinical Handover Project • Thematic analysis consensus framework
Themes • Efficiency • “It’s not always safest for us to come off the ward for handover.” [Intern] • flexible standardisation • ISBAR • Handover Tools • “Once it’s on paper you have to do something about it.” [Intern] • Documentation not duplication
Themes • Education & Supervision • “relieves that anxiety about your management” [Intern] • “Otherwise you get nothing on overtime” [RMO] • Education and feedback are the “selling points” [Intern] of the handover process
Handover facilitation guide for senior clinicians • Senior Clinicians’ handover input, feedback and teaching are highly valued by JMOs • Senior Clinician presence is critical to developing a strong handover culture in the hospital • Prompt arrival and attendance for the duration of handover is necessary • Accessibility and approachability of senior clinicians promotes learning
Handover facilitation guide for senior clinicians • Teach a 5-minute ‘clinical pearl’ when possible during handover • Review emergency team calls to critically unwell patients • Use the patients at handover as a stimulus to teaching • Give non-judgemental feedback on the management of unwell patients • Management suggestions on common clinical scenarios will improve patient care, help JMO confidence in clinical management, and reduce JMO anxiety at work
Themes • Patient safety and continuity of care • “Knowing the sick patients before they go off” [Intern] • clearer guidance on complex patients making it “easier with the management plan” [Intern] • improved continuity of team management plans • education about optimal management of common clinical scenarios
Strengths & Weaknesses • Qualitative findings not yet quantitatively assessed ? generalisability • ? observer bias • Marked consistency of themes across hospitals, rural to metroplitan • First study to identify the motivational value of handover as a key element to sustainability • JMO researchers
Relevance • NSW Health reported that this data collected was most useful in handover project implementation • Represented a shift in the paradigm for change – bottom up rather than top down • For local implementation in consultation with your JMOs
Summary • JMOs feel that when shift-to-shift handover is • Efficient, • Educational, • Facilitated by a senior clinician • it is effective in improving patient safety and continuity of care