Department of Anesthesiology & Critical Care, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA; Penn Center for Perioperative Outcomes Research and Transformation, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA; Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Department of Anesthesiology & Critical Care, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Am J Kidney Dis. 2020 Jan;75(1):61-71. doi: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2019.05.030. Epub 2019 Sep 3.
RATIONALE & OBJECTIVE: Collaboration between nephrology consultants and intensive care unit (ICU) teams is important in light of the high incidence of acute kidney injury in today's ICUs. Although there is considerable debate about how nephrology consultants and ICU teams should collaborate, communicative dynamics between the 2 parties remain poorly understood. This article describes interactions between nephrology consultants and ICU teams in the academic medical setting.
Focused ethnography using semi-structured interviews and participant observation.
SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: Purposive sampling was used to enroll nephrologists, nephrology fellows, and ICU practitioners across several roles collaborating in 3 ICUs (a medical ICU, a surgical ICU, and a cardiothoracic surgical ICU) of a large urban US academic medical center. Participant observation (150 hours) and semi-structured interviews (35) continued until theoretical saturation.
Interview and fieldnote transcripts were coded in an iterative team-based process. Explanation was developed using an abductive approach.
Nephrology consultants and surgical ICU teams exhibited discordant preferences about the aggressiveness of renal replacement therapy based on different understandings of physiology, goals of care, and acuity. Collaborative difficulties resulting from this discordance led to nephrology consultants often serving as dialysis proceduralists rather than diagnosticians in surgical ICUs and to consultants sometimes choosing not to express disagreements about clinical care because of the belief that doing so would not lead to changes in the course of care.
Aspects of this single-site study of an academic medical center may not be generalizable to other clinical settings and samples. Surgical team perspectives would provide further detail about nephrology consultation in surgical ICUs. The effects of findings on patient care were not examined.
Differences in approach between internal medicine-trained nephrologists and anesthesia- and surgery-trained intensivists and surgeons led to collaborative difficulties in surgical ICUs. These findings stress the need for medical teamwork research and intervention to address issues stemming from disciplinary siloing rooted in long-term socialization to different disciplinary practices.
鉴于当今重症监护病房(ICU)中急性肾损伤的高发,肾病学顾问与 ICU 团队之间的合作非常重要。尽管关于肾病学顾问和 ICU 团队应该如何合作存在大量争议,但这两个群体之间的交流动态仍知之甚少。本文描述了在学术医疗环境中肾病学顾问和 ICU 团队之间的相互作用。
采用半结构化访谈和参与式观察的重点人种学研究。
采用目的性抽样方法,在一家大型城市美国学术医疗中心的 3 个 ICU(内科 ICU、外科 ICU 和心胸外科 ICU)中招募了几位不同角色的肾病医师、肾病研究员和 ICU 医师参与研究。参与者观察(150 小时)和半结构化访谈(35 次)持续进行,直至达到理论饱和。
访谈和现场记录的转录本采用迭代团队基础的编码方法进行编码。使用溯因方法发展解释。
肾病学顾问和外科 ICU 团队对肾脏替代治疗的激进程度表现出不一致的偏好,这是基于对生理学、治疗目标和疾病严重程度的不同理解。由于这种不和谐导致的协作困难,导致肾病学顾问通常在外科 ICU 中充当透析程序员而不是诊断员,并且顾问有时选择不表达对临床护理的不同意见,因为他们认为这样做不会改变护理过程。
该单站点研究的局限性在于其仅适用于学术医疗中心,可能不适用于其他临床环境和样本。外科团队的观点将进一步详细介绍外科 ICU 中的肾病学咨询。研究未探讨研究结果对患者护理的影响。
内科医生培训的肾病学家与麻醉和外科培训的重症监护医生和外科医生之间方法上的差异导致了外科 ICU 中的协作困难。这些发现强调了医疗团队研究和干预的必要性,以解决源于长期社会化到不同学科实践的学科隔离问题。