Dies ist eine Übersichtsseite mit Metadaten zu dieser wissenschaftlichen Arbeit. Der vollständige Artikel ist beim Verlag verfügbar.
Lost in Translation: Challenges and Opportunities in Physician-to-Physician Communication During Patient Handoffs
530
Zitationen
4
Autoren
2005
Jahr
Abstract
Handoffs involve the transfer of rights, duties, and obligations from one person or team to another. In many high-precision, high-risk contexts such as a relay race or handling air traffic, handoff skills are practiced repetitively to optimize precision and anticipate errors. In medicine, wide variation exists in handoffs of hospitalized patients from one physician or team to another. Effective information transfer requires a solid foundation in communication skills. While these skills have received much attention in the medical literature, scholarship has focused on physician-to-patient, not physician-to-physician, communication. Little formal attention or education is available to reinforce this vital link in the continuity of patient care. The authors reviewed the literature on patient handoffs and evaluated the patient handoff process at Indiana University School of Medicine's internal medicine residency. House officers there rotate through four hospitals with three different computer systems. Two of the hospitals employ a computer-assisted patient handoff system; the other two utilize the standard pen-to-paper method. Considerable variation was observed in the quality and content of handoffs across these settings. Four major barriers to effective handoffs were identified: (1) the physical setting, (2) the social setting, (3) language barriers, and 4) communication barriers. The authors conclude that irrespective of local context, precise, unambiguous, face-to-face communication is the best way to ensure effective handoffs of hospitalized patients. They also maintain that the handoff process must be standardized and that students and residents must be taught the most effective, safe, satisfying, and efficient ways to perform handoffs.
Ähnliche Arbeiten
To Err Is Human
2000 · 14.078 Zit.
A Surgical Safety Checklist to Reduce Morbidity and Mortality in a Global Population
2009 · 5.546 Zit.
Incidence of Adverse Events and Negligence in Hospitalized Patients
1991 · 4.650 Zit.
An Intervention to Decrease Catheter-Related Bloodstream Infections in the ICU
2006 · 4.347 Zit.
The Nature of Adverse Events in Hospitalized Patients
1991 · 3.733 Zit.