University of Utah College of Nursing, Salt Lake City, UT 84112-5880, USA.
Clin Toxicol (Phila). 2013 Jun;51(5):435-43. doi: 10.3109/15563650.2013.801981. Epub 2013 May 23.
Poison control centers (PCCs) and emergency departments (EDs) rely upon telephone communication to collaborate. PCCs and EDs each create electronic records for the same patient during the course of collaboration, but those electronic records are not shared.
The purpose of this study was to describe the current, telephone based process of PCC-ED communication as the basis for potential process improvement.
This study was conducted at one PCC and two tertiary care EDs. We developed workflow diagrams to depict clinician descriptions of the current process, descriptions obtained through interviews of key informants. We also analyzed transcripts of phone calls between emergency departments and the poison control center, corresponding to a random sample of 120 PCC cases occurring January 1-December 31, 2011.
Collaboration between the ED and PCC takes place during multiple telephone calls, and the process is unsupported by shared documentation. The process occurs in three phases: notification, collaborative care, and ongoing consultation. In the ED, multiple care providers may communicate with the PCC, but only one ED care provider communicates with the poison control center specialist at a time. Handoffs occur for both ED and PCC. Collaborative care planning is common and most cases involve some type of request for information, whether vital signs, laboratory results, or verification that a treatment was administered. We found evidence of inefficiencies and safety vulnerabilities, including the inability of PCC specialists to reach ED care providers, telephone calls routed through multiple ED staff members in an attempt to reach the appropriate care provider, and exchange of clinical information with non-clinical staff. In 55% of cases, the patient was discharged prior to any synchronous telephone communication between the ED care provider and a PCC specialist. Ambiguous communication of information was observed in 22% of cases. In 12% of cases, a PCC specialist was unable to obtain requested information from the ED.
Inefficiencies and vulnerabilities occur in telephone-based PCC-ED communication. Prudence begs consideration of alternative processes and models of ED-PCC communication and information sharing, including a process that supports collaboration with health information exchange.
中毒控制中心(PCC)和急诊科(ED)依靠电话沟通来协作。PCC 和 ED 在协作过程中都会为同一患者创建电子记录,但这些电子记录并未共享。
本研究旨在描述 PCC-ED 电话沟通的当前流程,作为潜在流程改进的基础。
本研究在一个 PCC 和两个三级护理 ED 进行。我们开发了工作流程图来描述临床医生对当前流程的描述,这些描述是通过对关键信息提供者的访谈获得的。我们还分析了 2011 年 1 月 1 日至 12 月 31 日期间随机抽取的 120 例 PCC 案例中,急诊科与中毒控制中心之间的电话通话记录。
ED 和 PCC 之间的协作发生在多个电话通话中,且该过程没有共享文档的支持。该过程分为三个阶段:通知、协作护理和持续咨询。在 ED,多个护理提供者可能与 PCC 进行沟通,但每次只有一名 ED 护理提供者与中毒控制中心专家进行沟通。交接发生在 ED 和 PCC 双方。协作护理计划很常见,大多数情况下都涉及某种类型的信息请求,无论是生命体征、实验室结果还是确认治疗是否实施。我们发现存在效率低下和安全漏洞的证据,包括 PCC 专家无法联系到 ED 护理提供者、电话通过多个 ED 工作人员转接以试图联系到合适的护理提供者,以及与非临床工作人员交换临床信息。在 55%的情况下,在 ED 护理提供者和 PCC 专家之间进行任何同步电话沟通之前,患者已出院。在 22%的情况下观察到信息沟通不明确。在 12%的情况下,PCC 专家无法从 ED 获得所需信息。
基于电话的 PCC-ED 沟通中存在效率低下和安全漏洞。谨慎起见,需要考虑替代的 ED-PCC 沟通和信息共享流程和模型,包括支持与健康信息交换协作的流程。