Seelandt Julia Carolin, Walker Katie, Kolbe Michaela
Simulation Center, University Hospital Zurich, Rämistrasse 100, 8091, Zürich, Switzerland.
New York City, Health + Hospitals Simulation Center, 1400 Pelham Parkway South, Building 4, 2nd Floor, Bronx, NY, 10461, USA.
Adv Simul (Lond). 2021 Mar 4;6(1):7. doi: 10.1186/s41077-021-00161-5.
The goal of this study was to identify taken-for-granted beliefs and assumptions about use, costs, and facilitation of post-event debriefing. These myths prevent the ubiquitous uptake of post-event debriefing in clinical units, and therefore the identification of process, teamwork, and latent safety threats that lead to medical error. By naming these false barriers and assumptions, the authors believe that clinical event debriefing can be implemented more broadly.
We interviewed an international sample of 37 clinicians, educators, scholars, researchers, and healthcare administrators from hospitals, universities, and healthcare organizations in Western Europe and the USA, who had a broad range of debriefing experience. We adopted a systemic-constructivist approach that aimed at exploring in-depth assumptions about debriefing beyond obvious constraints such as time and logistics and focused on interpersonal relationships within organizations. Using circular questions, we intended to uncover new and tacit knowledge about barriers and facilitators of regular clinical debriefings. All interviews were transcribed and analyzed following a comprehensive process of inductive open coding.
In total, 1508.62 min of interviews (25 h, 9 min, and 2 s) were analyzed, and 1591 answers were categorized. Many implicit debriefing theories reflected current scientific evidence, particularly with respect to debriefing value and topics, the complexity and difficulty of facilitation, the importance of structuring the debriefing and engaging in reflective practice to advance debriefing skills. We also identified four debriefing myths which may prevent post-event debriefing from being implemented in clinical units.
The debriefing myths include (1) debriefing only when disaster strikes, (2) debriefing is a luxury, (3) senior clinicians should determine debriefing content, and (4) debriefers must be neutral and nonjudgmental. These myths offer valuable insights into why current debriefing practices are ad hoc and not embedded into daily unit practices. They may help ignite a renewed momentum into the implementation of post-event debriefing in clinical settings.
本研究的目的是确定关于事件后汇报的使用、成本和促进因素的一些被视为理所当然的信念和假设。这些误区阻碍了事件后汇报在临床科室的广泛应用,进而妨碍了对导致医疗差错的流程、团队协作及潜在安全威胁的识别。通过指出这些错误的障碍和假设,作者认为临床事件汇报能够得到更广泛的实施。
我们采访了来自西欧和美国的医院、大学及医疗保健机构的37位临床医生、教育工作者、学者、研究人员和医疗保健管理人员,他们具有广泛的汇报经验。我们采用了系统建构主义方法,旨在深入探究关于汇报的假设,超越时间和后勤等明显限制,并关注组织内部的人际关系。通过循环提问,我们试图揭示关于常规临床汇报的障碍和促进因素的新的隐性知识。所有访谈均进行了转录,并按照全面的归纳开放式编码过程进行分析。
总共分析了1508.62分钟的访谈内容(25小时9分钟2秒),并对1591个答案进行了分类。许多隐含的汇报理论反映了当前的科学证据,特别是在汇报价值和主题、促进的复杂性和难度、构建汇报结构以及进行反思性实践以提高汇报技巧的重要性方面。我们还确定了四个可能阻碍事件后汇报在临床科室实施的汇报误区。
汇报误区包括:(1)仅在灾难发生时进行汇报;(2)汇报是一种奢侈;(3)资深临床医生应确定汇报内容;(4)汇报者必须保持中立且不评判。这些误区为当前汇报实践为何临时进行且未融入日常科室实践提供了有价值的见解。它们可能有助于为临床环境中事件后汇报的实施重新注入动力。