Author:
Mahran Ghada Shalaby Khalaf,Ali Mostafa,Sayed Magdy Mohamed Mahdy,Hussien Mahmoud Ahmed Mohamed,AbdelWahab Omar Sherif Ahmed,Mohamed Sherif Ahmed AbdelWahab,Abdelhafez Amal Ismael
Abstract
This article reports a prospective, comparative study using a semistructured interview technique, to compare the perceptions of nursing professionals and physicians about the bedside handover practice, in intensive care units (ICUs). Clinical handovers are practiced every day, in many ways, in all institutional health care settings. Despite increasing demand for structured processes to guide clinical handovers, the perception may differ between nurses and physicians, particularly in the ICU. The results of the current study showed that the quality of the information provided during handovers was perceived by both the nurses and physicians as satisfactory and relevant to the patient's care. The findings of this study could have impacts on the daily medical practices in the ICU. The results of this study could be utilized to design programs that will improve nurses' and physicians' understanding and practices of the handover process as well as the information needed to be communicated.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)