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Patient handoff simulation: Does formal training build skills and confidence in transitions of patient care?. Daniel Relles , Renee Tholey, Christine Feldmeier, Richard Burkhart, Stacey Milan Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA April 24, 2013. Overview. Introduction Methods
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Patient handoff simulation: Does formal training build skills and confidence in transitions of patient care? Daniel Relles, Renee Tholey, Christine Feldmeier, Richard Burkhart, Stacey Milan Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA April 24, 2013
Overview • Introduction • Methods • Simulation • Assessment • Training • Results • Conclusion
Overview • Introduction • Methods • Simulation • Assessment • Training • Results • Conclusion
Introduction • Medical Errors: • Communication • Transitions in care • Signout process >2x daily • Content vs Process • Formal training and education focus on content • No training on process, efficiency, or self-management
Terminology Nightfloat Signout/Handoff “Running the List” RTL 9 - 5 6 - 6 Can new interns be taught systems and strategies to prioritize and recall important patient updates?
Overview • Introduction • Methods • Simulation • Assessment • Training • Results • Conclusion
Overview • Introduction • Methods • Simulation • Assessment • Training • Results • Conclusion
March 2012 1 2 3 1 2 1 Simulation 2 Assessment 3 Training
Team Handoff Simulation • End-of day, team “running the list” • Roles • 6 - 8 Interns (MS4) • 1 Junior resident (faculty) • 1 Senior resident (faculty) • Agenda • Activity overview (5 min) • Review of patients (5 min) • “Run the list” (30 min)
Team Handoff Simulation • Task • 1 complex patient • 1 basic patient • “You are the intern, who will • sign out to night float after • we run the list.”
Materials • Service List • Complex H&P • Basic H&P
Materials • Service List • Complex H&P • Basic H&P
Overview • Introduction • Methods • Simulation • Assessment • Training • Results • Conclusion
Overview • Introduction • Methods • Simulation • Assessment • Training • Results • Conclusion
Training • SimMan simulations • Formal training
Formal Training • ~45 minutes • Best practices from PGY1 & PGY2 • “What’s your system?” • Techniques and strategies for patient management • Help support efficiency, recall and prioritization
Formal Training • Coloring systems (black = run the list in black, blue = update the list, red = issues to escalate) • Cross-out/check box/circle • Circle, squares, and underlines • Imaging: 3 boxes (ordered/completed/read) • Separate list: top priorities • Document every nursing page • Consistent spaces • Reduced printing • Create table; generate list of “things to do” per pt • Strategic folding
Overview • Introduction • Methods • Simulation • Assessment • Training • Results • Conclusion
Identification of Urgent Issues n=21, p<0.05
Identification of Routine Issues n=21, p<0.05
Overview • Introduction • Methods • Simulation • Assessment • Training • Results • Conclusion
Conclusion • Described a simulation of a team signout and patient handoff that is a useful adjunct to on-the-job training • Improved ability to identify and recall urgent and non-urgent service issues • Helped build confidence in recall and prioritization