Creating a safe, reliable hospital at night handover: a case study in implementation science

Background We developed protocols to handover patients from day to hospital at night (H@N) teams. Setting NHS paediatric specialist hospital. Method We observed four handover protocols (baseline, Phases 1, 2 and 3) over 2 years. A mixed-method study (observation, interviews, task analysis, prospective risk assessment, document and case note review) explored the impact of different protocols on performance. Intervention In Phase 1, a handover protocol was introduced to resolve problems with the baseline H@N handover. Following this intervention, two further revisions to the handover occurred, driven by staff feedback (Phases 2 and 3). Results Variations in performance between handover protocols on three process measures, start time efficiency, total length of handover, and number of distractions and interruptions, were identified. Univariate regression analysis showed statistically significant differences between handover protocols on two surrogate outcome measures: number of flagging omissions and the number of out of hours deteriorations (p=0.04 for Phase 3 vs Phase 1 for both measures (CI 1.04 to 4.08; CI 1.03 to 4.33), and for Phase 3 vs Phase 2 (p=0.006 and p=0.001 (CI 1.22 to 5.15; CI 1.62 to 9.0)), respectively). The Phase 1 and 2 handover protocols were effective at identifying patients whose clinical condition warranted review overnight. Performance on both surrogate outcome measures, length of handover and distractions, deteriorated in Phase 3. Conclusions A carefully designed prioritisation process within the H@N handover can be effective at flagging acutely unwell patients. However, the protocol we introduced was unsustainable. In a complex healthcare system, sustainable implementation of new processes may be threatened by conflicting goals.

[1]  N Freemantle,et al.  Weekend hospitalization and additional risk of death: An analysis of inpatient data , 2012, Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine.

[2]  Brian Bjørn,et al.  Descriptions of verbal communication errors between staff. An analysis of 84 root cause analysis-reports from Danish hospitals , 2011, Quality and Safety in Health Care.

[3]  V T Farewell,et al.  Dynamic modelling in a study of surgical error management , 2007, Statistics in medicine.

[4]  R. Patey,et al.  “There is a chain of Chinese whispers …”: empirical data support the call to formally teach handover to prequalification doctors , 2009, Quality & Safety in Health Care.

[5]  Barry Kirwan,et al.  A Guide To Task Analysis: The Task Analysis Working Group , 1992 .

[6]  J. Reason,et al.  Human factors and cardiac surgery: a multicenter study. , 2000, The Journal of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery.

[7]  E Bywaters,et al.  Safe handover : safe patients , 2004 .

[8]  J. Blakey,et al.  Multimodal observational assessment of quality and productivity benefits from the implementation of wireless technology for out of hours working , 2012, BMJ Open.

[9]  Simon Foster,et al.  Assessing the quality of patient handoffs at care transitions , 2010, Quality and Safety in Health Care.

[10]  Christopher Beach,et al.  Improving handoffs in the emergency department. , 2010, Annals of emergency medicine.

[11]  Gary Herrin,et al.  A guide to practical human reliability assessment , 1996 .

[12]  Jeffrey B Cooper,et al.  Handoffs causing patient harm: a survey of medical and surgical house staff. , 2008, Joint Commission journal on quality and patient safety.

[13]  P. Margolis,et al.  The Model for Understanding Success in Quality (MUSIQ): building a theory of context in healthcare quality improvement , 2011, BMJ quality & safety.

[14]  L. Barthelmes,et al.  “That's all I got handed over”: Missed opportunities and opportunity for near misses in Wales , 2006, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[15]  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.

[16]  Bryony Dean Franklin,et al.  How reliable are clinical systems in the UK NHS? A study of seven NHS organisations , 2012, BMJ quality & safety.

[17]  K. McHardy,et al.  Passing the buck: clinical handovers at a tertiary hospital. , 2007, The New Zealand medical journal.

[18]  Janusz Pokorski,et al.  Nurses' perception of shift handovers in Europe: results from the European Nurses' Early Exit Study. , 2007, Journal of advanced nursing.

[19]  A. Shepherd,et al.  Guide to Task Analysis , 2003 .

[20]  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.

[21]  G. Schmidt,et al.  The effect of a checklist on the quality of post-anaesthesia patient handover: a randomized controlled trial. , 2013, International journal for quality in health care : journal of the International Society for Quality in Health Care.

[22]  Nancy Poole,et al.  Transfer of accountability: transforming shift handover to enhance patient safety. , 2006, Healthcare quarterly.

[23]  Robin McCartney,et al.  Opening the doors: building brand awareness. , 2006, Healthcare Quarterly.