A Safety Huddle Intervention in In-Patient Surgical Units: A Mixed-Methods Study

Author:

Lee Seung Eun1ORCID,Dahinten V. Susan2ORCID,Kim Eunkyung3ORCID,Lee Sang Hwa3ORCID,Han Soo Young4ORCID,Kim Phill Ja4ORCID,Kim Jung Yeon4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Mo-Im KIM Nursing Research Institute, College of Nursing, Yonsei University, Seoul 03722, Republic of Korea

2. School of Nursing, University of British Columbia, Vancouver V6T 2B5, Canada

3. College of Nursing and Brain Korea 21 FOUR Project, Yonsei University, Seoul 03722, Republic of Korea

4. Division of Nursing, Severance Hospital, Seoul 03722, Republic of Korea

Abstract

Open communication about patient safety concerns is necessary to enable a learning environment where lessons can be learned to improve patient safety, but nurses often hesitate to speak up even in situations where their patients may be at risk. One way to create a safe environment for speaking up is through the use of unit-level daily huddles. This study aimed to assess the effects of a 12-week huddle intervention on nine unit, nurse and patient care outcomes and describe nurses’ experiences with the intervention. We used a single group, pre- and post-test mixed-methods design, with a dominant quantitative thread, and a final sample of 89 staff nurses. The intervention was conducted in four surgical units in a tertiary teaching hospital in Seoul, Korea. The intervention included two educational workshops for huddle leaders, two workshops for staff nurses, and 12-week huddles with coaching visits. We collected quantitative data on nine outcomes using online surveys before and after the intervention and qualitative data on nurse experiences of the intervention after the intervention. Paired t-tests were used for quantitative data analysis, and content analysis was used for qualitative data. We examined four unit-level outcomes (organizational learning, situation monitoring, mutual support, and speaking-up climate), three nurse-level outcomes (promotive and prohibitive voice behaviors and job satisfaction), and two patient care outcomes (patient safety and quality of care). Significant improvements were found in six of the nine outcomes. Findings from the qualitative data confirmed the benefits of the intervention but also identified challenges to huddle participation. Patient safety huddles can contribute to a learning environment by flattening hierarchies and encouraging nurses to speak up regarding safety issues. Leadership is a key in role modelling and creating the foundation for a more collaborative patient safety culture in healthcare organizations, for example, through the use of daily huddles.

Funder

Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Leadership and Management

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