Center for Surgery & Public Health, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
J Surg Res. 2012 Sep;177(1):37-42. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2012.04.029. Epub 2012 May 4.
Communication failure is a common contributor to adverse events. We sought to characterize communication failures during complex operations.
We video recorded and transcribed six complex operations, representing 22 h of patient care. For each communication event, we determined the participants and the content discussed. Failures were classified into four types: audience (key individuals missing), purpose (issue nonresolution), content (insufficient/inaccurate information), and/or occasion (futile timing). We added a systems category to reflect communication occurring at the organizational level. The impact of each identified failure was described.
We observed communication failures in every case (mean 29, median 28, range 13-48), at a rate of one every 8 min. Cross-disciplinary exchanges resulted in failure nearly twice as often as intradisciplinary ones. Discussions about or mandated by hospital policy (20%), personnel (18%), or other patient care (17%) were most error prone. Audience and purpose each accounted for >40% of failures. A substantial proportion (26%) reflected flawed systems for communication, particularly those for disseminating policy (29% of system failures), coordinating personnel (27%), and conveying the procedure planned (27%) or the equipment needed (24%). In 81% of failures, inefficiency (extraneous discussion and/or work) resulted. Resource waste (19%) and work-arounds (13%) also were frequently seen.
During complex operations, communication failures occur frequently and lead to inefficiency. Prevention may be achieved by improving synchronous, cross-disciplinary communication. The rate of failure during discussions about/mandated by policy highlights the need for carefully designed standardized interventions. System-level support for asynchronous perioperative communication may streamline operating room coordination and preparation efforts.
沟通失败是导致不良事件的常见原因。我们试图描述复杂手术期间的沟通失败。
我们对六次复杂手术进行了视频录制和转录,共 22 小时的患者护理。对于每个沟通事件,我们确定了参与者和讨论的内容。故障分为四类:受众(关键人员缺失)、目的(问题未解决)、内容(信息不足/不准确)和/或场合(时机不当)。我们添加了一个系统类别,以反映组织层面的沟通。描述了每个识别出的故障的影响。
我们观察到每种情况下都存在沟通失败(平均 29 次,中位数 28 次,范围 13-48 次),每 8 分钟发生一次。跨学科交流导致故障的频率几乎是学科内交流的两倍。关于或由医院政策(20%)、人员(18%)或其他患者护理(17%)规定的讨论最容易出错。受众和目的各占故障的 40%以上。相当一部分(26%)反映了沟通系统存在缺陷,特别是在传播政策(系统故障的 29%)、协调人员(27%)以及传达计划的程序(27%)或所需设备(24%)方面。在 81%的故障中,效率低下(多余的讨论和/或工作)导致了资源浪费(19%)和工作规避(13%)也经常出现。
在复杂的手术中,沟通失败经常发生,导致效率低下。通过改善同步、跨学科的沟通,可以预防这种情况。关于/由政策规定的讨论中的故障发生率突出表明需要精心设计标准化干预措施。系统级支持异步围手术期沟通可能会简化手术室协调和准备工作。