Etherington Cole, Burns Joseph K, Ghanmi Nibras, Crnic Agnes, Mansour Fadi, Pysyk Christopher L, Crosby Edward, Boet Sylvain
Clinical Epidemiology Program, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Department of Anesthesiology & Pain Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Heliyon. 2023 Feb 27;9(3):e14094. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e14094. eCollection 2023 Mar.
Teamwork is a critical competency in high-risk settings like the operating room (OR). While conventional approaches focus on describing and learning from negative performance, there may be value in learning from high-performing behaviour, particularly in specialties where serious safety events are relatively rare. This study aimed to explore both the positive and negative use of non-technical skills by anesthesia practitioners in the OR and situate them within the clinical OR context.
This study employed a prospective observational design. Following research ethics approval, a sample of surgical cases in a tertiary hospital were recorded using the OR Black Box®. Data related to surgical phase timing, non-technical skills, team factors, and environmental factors were identified by analysts according to a modified Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety model. We performed descriptive statistics and qualitative description of these observations.
We observed 25 surgical cases capturing 242 instances of positive non-technical skills among anesthesiologists in the operating room and 9 instances of negative demonstrations. Situational awareness was most frequently (n = 160) observed, followed by communication and teamwork skills (n = 82), and were most often demonstrated in the context of potential environmental distractions (e.g., doors opening, unnecessary interruptions). The least common category of positive non-technical skills observed was leadership (n = 3).
Our findings show anesthesiologists are doing a lot "right" and there may be many opportunities for learning from positive practice in the clinical setting. These findings can inform future work to better understand and standardize best practices for non-technical performance in anesthesia.
团队合作是手术室等高风险环境中的一项关键能力。虽然传统方法侧重于描述负面表现并从中学习,但从高效行为中学习可能也有价值,特别是在严重安全事件相对较少的专业领域。本研究旨在探讨麻醉医生在手术室中对非技术技能的积极和消极运用,并将其置于手术室临床背景中。
本研究采用前瞻性观察设计。在获得研究伦理批准后,使用手术室黑匣子(OR Black Box®)记录了一家三级医院的一系列手术病例。分析师根据改进的患者安全系统工程倡议模型,识别了与手术阶段时间、非技术技能、团队因素和环境因素相关的数据。我们对这些观察结果进行了描述性统计和定性描述。
我们观察了25例手术病例,记录了手术室麻醉医生242次积极非技术技能表现和9次消极表现。情境意识出现的频率最高(n = 160),其次是沟通和团队合作技能(n = 82),并且这些技能最常在潜在环境干扰(例如,门打开、不必要的干扰)的情况下表现出来。观察到的积极非技术技能中最不常见的类别是领导力(n = 3)。
我们的研究结果表明麻醉医生在很多方面做得“正确”,并且在临床环境中从积极实践中学习可能有很多机会。这些发现可为未来工作提供参考,以更好地理解和规范麻醉中非技术表现的最佳实践。