A Delphi study to obtain consensus on medical emergency team (MET) stand‐down decision making

Author:

Kondos Natalie A.12ORCID,Barrett Jonathan2ORCID,McDonall Jo1ORCID,Bucknall Tracey12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing and Midwifery Faculty of Health Deakin University Victoria Geelong Australia

2. Centre for Quality and Patient Safety Research – Alfred Health Partnership, Institute for Health Transformation Deakin University Victoria Geelong Australia

Abstract

AbstractAimA medical emergency team (MET) stand‐down decision is the decision to end a MET response and hand responsibility for the patient back to ward staff for ongoing management. Little research has explored this decision. This study aimed to obtain expert consensus on the essential elements required to make optimal MET call stand‐down decisions and the communication required before MET departure.DesignA Delphi design was utilised.MethodsAn expert panel of 10 members were recruited based on their expert knowledge and recent clinical MET responder experience in acute hospital settings. Participants were emailed a consent form and an electronic interactive PDF for each survey. Two rounds were conducted with no attrition between rounds. The CREDES guidance on conducting and reporting Delphi studies was used to report this study.ResultsConsensus by an expert panel of 10 MET responders generated essential elements of MET stand‐down decisions. Essential elements comprised of two steps: (1) the stand‐down decision that was influenced by both the patient situation and the ward/organisational context; and (2) the communication required before actioning stand‐down. Communication after the decision required both verbal discussions and written documentation to hand over patient responsibility. Specific patient information, a management plan and an escalation plan were considered essential.ConclusionThe Delphi surveys reached consensus on the actions and communication required to stand down a MET call. Passing responsibility back to ward staff after a MET call requires both patient and ward safety assessments, and a clearly articulated patient plan for ward staff. Observation of MET call stand‐down decision‐making is required to validate the essential elements.Implication for the Profession and Patient/or Patient CareIn specifying the essential elements, this study offers clinical and MET staff a process to support the handing over of clinical responsibility from the MET to the ward staff, and clarification of management plans in order to reduce repeat MET calls and improve patient outcomes.ImpactMinimal research has been focussed on the decision to hand responsibility back to ward staff so the MET may leave the ward with safety plan in place. This study provided expert consensus to optimise MET stand‐down decision‐making and the ultimate decision to end a MET call. Communication of agreed patient treatment and escalation plans is recommended before leaving the ward. This study can be used as a checklist for MET responder staff making these decisions and ward staff responsible for post‐MET call care. The aim being to reduce the likelihood of potentially preventable repeat deterioration in the MET patient population.Reporting MethodThe CREDES guidance on conducting and reporting Delphi studies.Patient or Public ContributionNone.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,General Nursing

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