Application of a Human Factors and Systems Engineering Approach to Explore Care Transitions of Sepsis Survivors From Hospital to Home Health Care

Author:

Oh Sungho1ORCID,Sang Elaine1ORCID,Stawnychy Michael A.1,Garren Patrik1ORCID,You Sang Bin1ORCID,O’Connor Melissa12,Hirschman Karen B.1ORCID,Hodgson Nancy1,Cranston Teresa3,Jablonski Juliane4,O’Brien Karen5ORCID,Newcomb Michael5,Spahr Melissa6,Bowles Kathryn H.17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Pennsylvania, USA

2. Villanova University, USA

3. Penn Medicine Lancaster General Health, USA

4. University of Pennsylvania Health System, USA

5. Penn Medicine at Home, USA

6. Penn Medicine Chester County Hospital, USA

7. VNS Health, USA

Abstract

Study Aim This study aims to describe the transition-in-care work process for sepsis survivors going from hospitals to home health care (HHC) and identify facilitators and barriers to enable practice change and safe care transitions using a human factors and systems engineering approach. Background Despite high readmission risk for sepsis survivors, the transition-in-care work process from hospitals to HHC has not been described. Methods We analyzed semi-structured needs assessment interviews with 24 stakeholders involved in transitioning sepsis survivors from two hospitals and one affiliated HHC agency participating in the parent implementation science study, I-TRANSFER. The qualitative data analysis was guided by the Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety (SEIPS) framework to describe the work process and identify work system elements. Results We identified 31 tasks characterized as decision making, patient education, communication, information, documentation, and scheduling tasks. Technological and organizational facilitators lacked in HHC compared to the hospitals. Person and organization elements in HHC had the most barriers but few facilitators. Additionally, we identified specific task barriers that could hinder sepsis information transfer from hospitals to HHC. Conclusion This study explored the complex transition-in-care work processes for sepsis survivors going from hospitals to HHC. We identified barriers, facilitators, and critical areas for improvement to enable implementation and ensure safe care transitions. A key finding was the sepsis information transfer deficit, highlighting a critical issue for future study. Application We recommend using the SEIPS framework to explore complex healthcare work processes before the implementation of evidence-based interventions.

Funder

National Institute of Nursing Research

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Applied Psychology,Human Factors and Ergonomics

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