EMR-based handoff tool improves completeness of internal medicine residents’ handoffs

Author:

Tisdale Rebecca LORCID,Eggers Zac,Shieh Lisa

Abstract

BackgroundThe majority of adverse events in healthcare involve communication breakdown. Physician-to-physician handoffs are particularly prone to communication errors, yet have been shown to be more complete when systematised according to a standardised bundle. Interventions that improve thoroughness of handoffs have not been widely studied.AimTo measure the effect of an electronic medical record (EMR)-based handoff tool on handoff completeness.InterventionThis EMR-based handoff tool included a radio button prompting users to classify patients as stable, a ‘watcher’ or unstable. It automatically pulled in EMR data on the patient’s 24-hour vitals, common lab tests and code status. Finally, it provided text boxes labelled ‘Active Issues’, ‘Action List (To-Dos)’ and ‘If/Then’ to fill in.Implementation and evaluationWritten handoffs from general and specialty (haematology, oncology, cardiology) Internal Medicine resident-run inpatient wards were evaluated on a randomly chosen representative sample of days in April and May 2015 at Stanford University Medical Center, focusing on a predefined set of content elements. The intervention was then implemented in June 2015 with postintervention data collected in an identical fashion in August to September 2016.ResultsHandoff completeness improved significantly (p<0.0001). Improvement in inclusion of illness severity was notable for its magnitude and its importance in establishing a consistent mental model of a patient. Elements that automatically pulled in data and those prompting users to actively fill in data both improved.ConclusionA simple EMR-based handoff tool providing a mix of frameworks for completion and automatic pull-in of objective data improved handoff completeness. This suggests that EMR-based interventions may be effective at improving handoffs, possibly leading to fewer medical errors and better patient care.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,Leadership and Management

Reference13 articles.

1. The Joint Commission. Sentinel event statistics data: root causes by event type. http://www.jointcommission.org/sentinel_event_statistics (accessed 29 Apr 2015).

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3. Lost in Translation: Challenges and Opportunities in Physician-to-Physician Communication During Patient Handoffs

4. Interns Overestimate the Effectiveness of Their Hand-off Communication

5. I-PASS, a Mnemonic to Standardize Verbal Handoffs

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