Debriefing to improve interprofessional teamwork in the operating room: A systematic review

Author:

Skegg Emma1,McElroy Canice1,Mudgway Mercedes1ORCID,Hamill James12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Starship Children's Hospital Grafton, Auckland New Zealand

2. Department of Paediatrics, Child and Youth Health, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences The University of Auckland Auckland New Zealand

Abstract

AbstractPurposeDebriefing has been pivotal in medical simulation training, but its application to the real‐world operating room environment has been challenging. We reviewed the literature on routine surgical debriefing with special reference to its implementation, barriers, and effectiveness.DesignDescriptive systematic review following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐Analyses guidelines.MethodsInclusion criteria were papers pertaining to debriefing in routine surgical practice. Excluded were papers reporting simulation training. We searched Google Scholar, CINAHL, Web of Science Core Collection, PsychINFO, Medline, Embase, and ProQuest Theses & Dissertations Global. The last search was performed on March 14, 2022. Quality was assessed on a 21‐point checklist adapted from a standard reporting guideline. Synthesis was descriptive.FindingsThe search process resulted in 19 papers. Publication dates ranged from 2007–2022. Study methods included surveys, interviews, and analysis of administrative data. Five papers involved a specific intervention. Quality scores ranged from 12–19 out of 21. On synthesis, we identified five topics: explanations of how debriefing had been implemented; the value of coaching and audit; the learning dimensions of debriefing, both team learning and quality improvement at the organizational level; the effect of debriefing on patient safety or the organization's culture; and barriers to debriefing.ConclusionsSuccessful implementation programs were characterized by strong commitment from management and support by frontline workers. Integration with administrative quality and safety processes, and information feedback to frontline workers are fundamental to successful debriefing programs.Clinical RelevanceDebriefing can improve teamwork, learning, and psychological safety but is difficult to practice in the operating room environment. It is relevant to review the benefits and barriers to debriefing, and to learn from the experience of others, in order to run better debriefing models in our own hospitals.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Nursing

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