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Communication A Chiasm of Perspective If men are from Mars and women from Venus, where are doctors and nurses from? Jodi Jackson, MD Section of Neonatology Children’s Mercy Hospitals and Clinics Kansas City, MO Some slides adapted from Michael Leonard, MD presentation on “Effective Teamwork and Communication in Delivering Safe Care” December 2005 Example • • • • • 2 am Lots of detail Very tired provider Unclear expectations Communication failure Before We Start • Please take a few minutes, and discuss with the people around you a recent phone call you made or received to/from a colleague, nurse, doctor consultation, other – – – – – – – Write down purpose of call Who call was to or from Pertinent issues you remember Why the call was made What were the expectations of the call Did the call meet your expectations Anything else significant • Was the purpose of the call clear to the caller and person receiving the call Yes or No • Where the expectations of the call met Yes or No Video Example • http://scope/QI/Data/04_ps17.htm Your Examples Example 1 • • • • • • • • Title— Purpose of call— Call from— Call to— Expectations— Pertinent issues— Expectations met— Opportunities for improvement— Example 2 • • • • • • • • Title— Purpose of call— Call from— Call to— Expectations— Pertinent issues— Expectations met— Opportunities for improvement— Example 3 • • • • • • • • Title— Purpose of call— Call from— Call to— Expectations— Pertinent issues— Expectations met— Opportunities for improvement— Why Communication? * The overwhelming majority of untoward events involve communication failure * The clinical environment has evolved beyond the limitations of individual human performance Where Do Things Fall Through the Cracks ? * Systems – information, tests, diagnoses * Communication * Hand offs • An Institute of Medicine report concluded in 2000 that up to 98,000 Americans die each year because of medical mistakes. The report called on governments, doctors, and private industry to launch a massive effort to increase error prevention. • http://www.webmd.com/news/20070403/studymedical-errors-still-aproblem?ecd=wnl_lbt_042507 Effective Communication Requires: * Structured communication – SBAR * Assertion/critical language – key words, the ability to speak up and stop the show * Psychological safety – an environment of respect Misunderstandings Movie Clip Need for Communication “The less innate understanding there is concerning a specific task, the more disparity there will be between the intended result and the actual result.” Human Error Is Inevitable Because: * * * * Inherent human limitations Complex, unsafe systems Safety is often assumed, not assured Culture of the expert individual Error Is Inevitable Because of Human Limitations * Limited memory capacity – 5 to 7 pieces of information in short-term memory * Negative effects of stress – error rates * tunnel vision * Negative influence of fatigue and other physiological factors * Limited ability to multitask – cell phones and driving THEN WE HAVE HUMAN JUDGMENT Error Management * The best approach is effective teamwork and communication – everyone in the same movie * And having predictability, so people know what is supposed to happen MD–RN: Different Communication Styles * Nurses are trained to be narrative and descriptive * Physicians are trained to be problem solvers “what do you want me to do” – “ just give me the headlines” * Complicating factors: gender, national culture, the pecking order, prior relationship * Perceptions of teamwork depend on your point of view Example • Communication of frequent desaturation events – Does communicator have an expectation regarding response to call – Is the communicator concerned or just reporting – Does the communicator know how this relates to previous findings Example • Call from outside referral – No context in which to frame information – No order to information given – No clear reason for all Situational Briefing Model S-B-A-R * Situation * Background * Assessment * Recommendation SBAR in OB • S – Impending uterine rupture • B – VBAC, dense epidural, persistent breakthrough pain, complete • A – I’m concerned, something’s wrong • R – I think she needs a C-S. I need you now SBAR Patient Communication TOOL NICU 1. State your name and pod 2. Assure attention of call recipient Situation S 1. I am calling about: ________________(Patient’s Name, pod space) 2. The reason I am calling is::_____________________________ State if this is a serious problem Background 1. The context, background relevant to the current problem (see below)__________________________________________________ B Assessment What do you think the problem is?____________________________ Recommendation or Request What you think would help or needs to be done__________________ A And time frame it needs to be done in ___________________ ___________________________________________________________________ Background: (could include GA, DOL, major diagnoses, current level of respiratory support, current plan of care (ie weaning vent, increasing support etc), Stability of the situation) R (Could include data to support your current concern; Vital signs, labs, results, physical assessment pertinent to the problem, especially changes, interventions taken so fare) (Limit non-relevant information, it makes it harder to understand the important issues) Assessment: (could include our conclusions about the present situation and how severe it seems to be. If the situation is unclear at least try to indicate what body system might be involved or what is ruled out) Recommendations: (could include medicines, tests, x-rays, physician evaluation) Write down and read back any orders. Clarify questions and under what circumstances to call back. DOCUMENT THE CHANGE IN CONDITION & THE PHYSICIAN NOTIFICATION. SBAR Communication TOOl NICU Before making a call, think about your expectations for the response, what components of a response will be helpful to you. Situation 1. State your name 2. I am calling about: ________________(Patient’s Name, and pod space) 3. The reason I am calling is::_____________________________ State if this is a serious problem S Background 1. The context, background relevant to the current problem ________________ (could include GA, DOL, major diagnoses, current level of respiratory support, current plan of care (ie weaning vent, increasing support etc), Stability of the situation, data to support your current concern; Vital signs, labs, results, physical assessment pertinent to the problem, especially changes, interventions taken so fare) Assessment B What do you think the problem is?____________________________ (Your conclusions about the present situation and how severe it seems to be. If the situation is unclear at least try to indicate what body system might be involved or what is ruled out) Recommendation or Request What you think would help or needs to be done (what are your expectations for this call)_____________________________________________________ (Could include medicines, tests, x-rays, physician evaluation, or nothing) A And time frame it needs to be done in ___________________ Write down and read back any orders. Clarify questions and under what circumstances to call back. DOCUMENT THE CHANGE CONDITION & THE PHYSICIAN NOTIFICATION. ______________________________________________________ Response 1. Response time (circle one) R Less than 5 minutes 5-10 minutes 10-15 minutes 2. Response met expectation > 15 minutes Yes No (concerns address, plan made, with clear next steps and criteria for call back) 3. Response was cordial and non-threatening Yes No 4. I generally feel comfortable calling the doctor Yes No When Receiving a Call • How often are you given a clear: --Situation Never 1 2 3 4 5 Always When Receiving a Call • How often are you given a clear: --Background Never 1 2 3 4 5 Always When Receiving a Call • How often are you given a clear: --Assessment Never 1 2 3 4 5 Always When Receiving a Call • How often are you given a clear: -- Recommendation Never 1 2 3 4 5 always When Receiving a Call • How often to you really understand the expectation of the call: Never 1 2 3 4 5 always When Receiving a Call • How often do you ask (in a subtle way) “why are you calling”? Never 1 2 3 4 5 always SBAR * Situation – the punch line 5 to 10 seconds * Background – the context, objective data, how did we get here? * Assessment – what is the problem? * Recommendation – what do we need to do? Assertion – What Is It? “Individuals speak up, and state their information with appropriate persistence until there is a clear resolution.” Assertion • Model to guide and improve assertion in the interest of patient safety GET PERSON’S ATTENTION REACH * DECISION PROPOSE ACTION EXPRESS CONCERN STATE PROBLEM nt Pe ta l ab s/ In te r tL s Te st ns Si gn n e Ca r or t O L va t io er /O bs rti ne n Ex am Vi D Si tu at io of s G A rn up p fs an of Pl ve lo ilit y le St ab ur re e is os on ce ia gn C D le r Na m Ca l C ve nt on io cl n us io W n St ha at tI ed ne ed fro Ti m m yo ef ra u m cl e ar of ifi ca ne it o ed ns o --w rd e rit rs e gi do ve w n n/ re ad ba ca llb ck ac k sp ec ifi Va cs lid N (li st wi se ) C of tie nt fic ng ec i it t i m Sp Ad Pa ID Percent Some Data • Baseline data regarding information shared during phone calls 1 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 SBAR QA Form NICU data, CMH Situation Y N Background Y N Assessment Y N Recommendatio Y n ID of caller Gestational Age Vital Signs What I need from you Patient Name Day of life Exam / Observations Timeframe of Need Admitting Diagnosis Current level of support Pertinent Labs / Tests Orders given Specific Concern Plan of Care Interventions Clarification – Write down / Read back Stability of Situation Conclusion Stated Callback Specifics Directions: 1.Once you have taken and completed a call, please fill out the questionnaire on SBAR. 2.The Y means “yes” the caller gave you the information without you asking for it. The N means “no” you did not get the information or you had to ask for it. N Practice • • • • Please form some small groups Look at your examples See if formatting into a form is helpful Report back Your Examples • Who has examples they would like to share? Next Steps • JCAHO recommendation for all caregivers • In order to be effective, doctors need to accept and mentor nurses in their transition to using SBAR – Recommendation part is hard to get around • why is recommendation accepted or not • a great teaching opportunity to make sure everyone is on the “same page” Thank you for your attention. Comments?