Factors that impact on the safety of patient handovers: An interview study

Author:

Siemsen Inger Margrete Dyrholm12,Madsen Marlene Dyrløv2,Pedersen Lene Funck2,Michaelsen Lisa2,Pedersen Anette Vesterskov2,Andersen Henning Boje1,Østergaard Doris2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Management Engineering, Danish Technical University (DTU), Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark

2. Danish Institute of Medical Simulation (DIMS), Capital Region, Herlev Hospital, Denmark

Abstract

Aims: Improvement of clinical handover is fundamental to meet the challenges of patient safety. The primary aim of this interview study is to explore healthcare professionals’ attitudes and experiences with critical episodes in patient handover in order to elucidate factors that impact on handover from ambulance to hospitals and within and between hospitals. The secondary aim is to identify possible solutions to optimise handovers, defined as “situations where the professional responsibility for some or all aspects of a patient’s diagnosis, treatment or care is transferred to another person on a temporary or permanent basis”. Methods: We conducted 47 semi-structured single-person interviews in a large university hospital in the Capital Region in Denmark in 2008 and 2009 to obtain a comprehensive picture of clinicians’ perceptions of self-experienced critical episodes in handovers. We included different types of handover processes that take place within several specialties. A total of 23 nurses, three nurse assistants, 13 physicians, five paramedics, two orderlies, and one radiographer from different departments and units were interviewed. Results: We found eight central factors to have an impact on patient safety in handover situations: communication, information, organisation, infrastructure, professionalism, responsibility, team awareness, and culture. Conclusions: The eight factors identified indicate that handovers are complex situations. The organisation did not see patient handover as a critical safety point of hospitalisation, revealing that the safety culture in regard to handover was immature. Work was done in silos and many of the handover barriers were seen to be related to the fact that only few had a full picture of a patient’s complete pathway.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

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