Centre for Research Excellence in Patient Safety, Department of Epidemiology and Preventative Medicine, The Alfred Centre, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2012 Sep 4;2(5). doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2011-000734. Print 2012.
This exploratory study reports on maternity clinicians' perceptions of transfer of their responsibility and accountability for patients in relation to clinical handover with particular focus transfers of care in birth suite.
A qualitative study of semistructured interviews and focus groups of maternity clinicians was undertaken in 2007. De-indentified data were transcribed and coded using the constant comparative method. Multiple themes emerged but only those related to responsibility and accountability are reported in this paper.
One tertiary Australian maternity hospital.
Maternity care midwives, nurses (neonatal, mental health, bed managers) and doctors (obstetric, neontatology, anaesthetics, internal medicine, psychiatry).
Primary outcome measures were the perceptions of clinicians of maternity clinical handover.
The majority of participants did not automatically connect maternity handover with the transfer of responsibility and accountability. Once introduced to this concept, they agreed that it was one of the roles of clinical handover. They spoke of complete transfer, shared and ongoing responsibility and accountability. When clinicians had direct involvement or extensive clinical knowledge of the patient, blurring of transition of responsibility and accountability sometimes occurred. A lack of 'ownership' of a patient and their problems were seen to result in confusion about who was to address the clinical issues of the patient. Personal choice of ongoing responsibility and accountability past the handover communication were described. This enabled the off-going person to rectify an inadequate handover or assist in an emergency when duty clinicians were unavailable.
There is a clear lack of consensus about the transition of responsibility and accountability-this should be explicit at the handover. It is important that on each shift and new workplace environment clinicians agree upon primary role definitions, responsibilities and accountabilities for patients. To provide system resilience, secondary responsibilities may be allocated as required.
本探索性研究报告了产妇临床医生对其在与临床交接相关的患者责任和问责转移的看法,重点关注分娩套房中的护理转移。
2007 年对产妇临床医生进行了半结构式访谈和焦点小组的定性研究。对未标识的数据进行了转录和编码,并使用恒定比较法进行了编码。出现了多个主题,但本文件仅报告了与责任和问责相关的主题。
澳大利亚一家三级产科医院。
产妇护理助产士、护士(新生儿、心理健康、床位管理员)和医生(产科、新生儿科、麻醉、内科、精神病学)。
主要结果测量是临床医生对产妇临床交接的看法。
大多数参与者并没有自动将产妇交接与责任和问责的转移联系起来。一旦引入这一概念,他们就同意这是临床交接的作用之一。他们谈到了完全转移、共同和持续的责任和问责。当临床医生直接参与或对患者有广泛的临床知识时,责任和问责的过渡有时会变得模糊。对患者及其问题缺乏“所有权”被认为会导致谁来解决患者的临床问题感到困惑。有人描述了个人选择在交接沟通之外继续承担责任和问责,这使即将离职的人能够纠正交接不足或在值班医生无法提供帮助时协助紧急情况。
对于责任和问责的过渡,显然缺乏共识——这应该在交接时明确。在每个班次和新的工作场所环境中,临床医生都应就患者的主要角色定义、责任和问责达成一致非常重要。为了提供系统弹性,可能需要分配次要责任。