Evaluation of Postoperative Handover Using a Tool to Assess Information Transfer and Teamwork

Objective:To assess the feasibility, validity, and reliability of a postoperative Handover Assessment Tool (PoHAT) and to evaluate the current practices of the postoperative handover at 2 large European hospitals. Background:Postoperative handover is one of the most critical phases in the care of a patient undergoing surgery. However, handovers are largely informal and variable. A thorough understanding of the problem is necessary before safety solutions can be considered. Methods:Postoperative Handover Assessment Tool (PoHAT) was developed through task analysis, semistructured interviews, literature review, and learned society guidelines. Subsequent validation was done by the Delphi technique. Feasibility and reliability were then evaluated by direct observation of handovers at 2 large European hospitals. Outcomes measures included information omissions, task errors, teamwork evaluation, duration of handover, and number of distractions. Results:The tool was feasible to use and inter-rater reliability was excellent (r = 0.96, P < 0.001). Evaluation of handover at the 2 study sites revealed a median of 8 information omissions per handover at both the centers (IQR 7–10). There were a median of 3 task errors per handover (IQR 2–4). Thirty-five percent of handovers had distractions, which included competing demands for nurse attention, bleeps, and case-irrelevant communication. Conclusion:This study has established the feasibility, validity, and reliability of a tool for evaluating postoperative handover. In addition to serving as an objective measure of postoperative handover, the tool can also be used to evaluate the efficacy of any intervention developed to improve this process. The study has also shown that postoperative handover is characterized by incomplete transfer of information and failures in the performance of key tasks.

[1]  Nick Sevdalis,et al.  A systematic quantitative assessment of risks associated with poor communication in surgical care. , 2010, Archives of surgery.

[2]  W. Berry,et al.  A Surgical Safety Checklist to Reduce Morbidity and Mortality in a Global Population , 2009, The New England journal of medicine.

[3]  D. G. Williams,et al.  Training and the European Working Time Directive: a 7 year review of paediatric anaesthetic trainee caseload data. , 2009, British journal of anaesthesia.

[4]  Nick Sevdalis,et al.  Development, initial reliability and validity testing of an observational tool for assessing technical skills of operating room nurses. , 2009, International journal of nursing studies.

[5]  Nick Sevdalis,et al.  Observational Teamwork Assessment for Surgery: Construct Validation With Expert Versus Novice Raters , 2009, Annals of surgery.

[6]  D Goodwin,et al.  Interprofessional handover and patient safety in anaesthesia: observational study of handovers in the recovery room. , 2008, British journal of anaesthesia.

[7]  C. Vincent,et al.  Distracting communications in the operating theatre. , 2007, Journal of evaluation in clinical practice.

[8]  Rajesh Aggarwal,et al.  An Evaluation of the Feasibility, Validity, and Reliability of Laparoscopic Skills Assessment in the Operating Room , 2007, Annals of surgery.

[9]  Nick Sevdalis,et al.  Observational Teamwork Assessment for Surgery (OTAS): Refinement and Application in Urological Surgery , 2007, World Journal of Surgery.

[10]  A. McEwan,et al.  Patient handover from surgery to intensive care: using Formula 1 pit‐stop and aviation models to improve safety and quality , 2007, Paediatric anaesthesia.

[11]  T. Graham,et al.  The European Working Time Directive and training in cardiothoracic surgery in the United Kingdom. , 2007, The surgeon : journal of the Royal Colleges of Surgeons of Edinburgh and Ireland.

[12]  Emily S Patterson,et al.  Communication strategies from high-reliability organizations: translation is hard work. , 2007, Annals of surgery.

[13]  Karen D Horvath,et al.  Surgeon Information Transfer and Communication: Factors Affecting Quality and Efficiency of Inpatient Care , 2007, Annals of surgery.

[14]  Ara Darzi,et al.  Observational Assessment of Surgical Teamwork: A Feasibility Study , 2006, World Journal of Surgery.

[15]  N. Sevdalis,et al.  Measuring intra-operative interference from distraction and interruption observedin the operating theatre , 2006, Ergonomics.

[16]  Catherine Pope,et al.  Communication between anesthesiologists, patients and the anesthesia team: a descriptive study of induction and emergence , 2005, Canadian journal of anaesthesia = Journal canadien d'anesthesie.

[17]  R. Reznick,et al.  Communication failures in the operating room: an observational classification of recurrent types and effects , 2004, Quality and Safety in Health Care.

[18]  M. Bell,et al.  Handover of responsibility for the anaesthetised patient – opinion and practice , 2004, Anaesthesia.

[19]  José Orlando Gomes,et al.  Handoff strategies in settings with high consequences for failure: lessons for health care operations. , 2004, International journal for quality in health care : journal of the International Society for Quality in Health Care.

[20]  Glenn Regehr,et al.  Delphi as a method to establish consensus for diagnostic criteria. , 2003, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[21]  Sharon W. W. Chan,et al.  Introduction of night shift call system for surgical trainees: a prospective self‐controlled trial , 2003, Medical education.

[22]  C. Powell The Delphi technique: myths and realities. , 2003, Journal of advanced nursing.

[23]  J. Bewley Immediate postanaesthetic recovery , 2003, Anaesthesia.

[24]  M. Kluger,et al.  Recovery room incidents: a review of 419 reports from the Anaesthetic Incident Monitoring Study (AIMS) , 2002, Anaesthesia.

[25]  Joseph M. Derosier,et al.  Using health care Failure Mode and Effect Analysis: the VA National Center for Patient Safety's prospective risk analysis system. , 2002, The Joint Commission journal on quality improvement.

[26]  J. Anwari Quality of handover to the postanaesthesia care unit nurse , 2002, Anaesthesia.

[27]  M. Hogarth,et al.  Reducing hours of work of preregistration house officers: report on a shift system. , 1991, BMJ.

[28]  R. H. Franke,et al.  The Hawthorne experiments: First statistical interpretation. , 1978 .

[29]  A V Milholland,et al.  Medical assessment by a Delphi group opinion technic. , 1973, The New England journal of medicine.

[30]  Juri Pill,et al.  The Delphi method: Substance, context, a critique and an annotated bibliography , 1971 .

[31]  Norman Crolee Dalkey,et al.  An experimental study of group opinion , 1969 .

[32]  N. Dalkey,et al.  An Experimental Application of the Delphi Method to the Use of Experts , 1963 .

[33]  D. Spiegelhalter,et al.  Consensus development methods, and their use in clinical guideline development. , 1998, Health technology assessment.