Ireland S, Gilchrist J, Maconochie I
Emergency Medicine Department, Northern General Hospital, Sheffield, UK.
Emerg Med J. 2008 Jun;25(6):328-30. doi: 10.1136/emj.2007.048942.
Debriefing is a form of psychological "first aid" with origins in the military. It moved into the spotlight in 1983, when Mitchell described the technique of critical incident stress debriefing. To date little work has been carried out relating to the effectiveness of debriefing hospital staff after critical incidents. The aim of this study was to survey current UK practice in order to develop some "best practice" guidelines.
This study was a descriptive evaluation based on a structured questionnaire survey of 180 lead paediatric and emergency medicine consultants and nurses, selected from 50 UK trusts. Questions collected data about trust policy and events and also about individuals' personal experience of debrief. Free text comments were analyzed using the framework method described for qualitative data.
Overall, the response rate was 80%. 62% said a debrief would occur most of the time. 85% reported that the main aim was to resolve both medical and psychological and emotional issues. Nearly all involve both doctors and nurses (88%); in over half (62%) other healthcare workers would be invited, eg, paramedics, students. Sessions are usually led by someone who was involved in the resuscitation attempt (76%). This was a doctor in 80%, but only 18% of responders said that a specifically trained person had led the session. Individuals' psychological issues would be discussed further on a one-to-one basis and the person directed to appropriate agencies. Any strategic working problems highlighted would be discussed with a senior member of staff and resolved via clinical governance pathways.
Little is currently known about the benefits of debriefing hospital staff after critical incidents such as failed resuscitation. Debriefing is, however, widely practised and the results of this study have been used to formulate some best practice guidelines while awaiting evidence from further studies.
汇报是一种心理“急救”形式,起源于军事领域。1983年,米切尔描述了重大事件应激汇报技术后,它开始受到关注。迄今为止,关于重大事件后对医院工作人员进行汇报的有效性的研究很少。本研究的目的是调查英国目前的做法,以制定一些“最佳实践”指南。
本研究是一项描述性评估,基于对从英国50个信托机构中选出的180名儿科和急诊医学首席顾问及护士进行的结构化问卷调查。问题收集了关于信托政策和事件的数据,以及个人汇报的个人经历。使用针对定性数据描述的框架方法分析自由文本评论。
总体而言,回复率为80%。62%的人表示大多数时候会进行汇报。85%的人报告说主要目的是解决医疗、心理和情感问题。几乎所有汇报都涉及医生和护士(88%);超过一半(62%)的汇报会邀请其他医护人员,如护理人员、学生。汇报通常由参与复苏尝试的人员主持(76%)。其中80%是医生,但只有18%的受访者表示汇报由经过专门培训的人员主持。个人的心理问题将在一对一的基础上进一步讨论,并将此人转介到适当的机构。任何突出的战略工作问题将与高级工作人员讨论,并通过临床治理途径解决。
目前对于在复苏失败等重大事件后对医院工作人员进行汇报的益处知之甚少。然而,汇报被广泛应用,本研究的结果已被用于制定一些最佳实践指南,同时等待进一步研究的证据。