College of Nursing, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA.
Department of Anesthesia and Perioperative Medicine, College of Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2024 Apr 12;24(1):459. doi: 10.1186/s12913-024-10895-3.
Resilience, in the field of Resilience Engineering, has been identified as the ability to maintain the safety and the performance of healthcare systems and is aligned with the resilience potentials of anticipation, monitoring, adaptation, and learning. In early 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic challenged the resilience of US healthcare systems due to the lack of equipment, supply interruptions, and a shortage of personnel. The purpose of this qualitative research was to describe resilience in the healthcare team during the COVID-19 pandemic with the healthcare team situated as a cognizant, singular source of knowledge and defined by its collective identity, purpose, competence, and actions, versus the resilience of an individual or an organization.
We developed a descriptive model which considered the healthcare team as a unified cognizant entity within a system designed for safe patient care. This model combined elements from the Patient Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety (SEIPS) and the Advanced Team Decision Making (ADTM) models. Using a qualitative descriptive design and guided by our adapted model, we conducted individual interviews with healthcare team members across the United States. Data were analyzed using thematic analysis and extracted codes were organized within the adapted model framework.
Five themes were identified from the interviews with acute care professionals across the US (N = 22): teamwork in a pressure cooker, consistent with working in a high stress environment; healthcare team cohesion, applying past lessons to present challenges, congruent with transferring past skills to current situations; knowledge gaps, and altruistic behaviors, aligned with sense of duty and personal responsibility to the team. Participants' described how their ability to adapt to their environment was negatively impacted by uncertainty, inconsistent communication of information, and emotions of anxiety, fear, frustration, and stress. Cohesion with co-workers, transferability of skills, and altruistic behavior enhanced healthcare team performance.
Working within the extreme unprecedented circumstances of COVID-19 affected the ability of the healthcare team to anticipate and adapt to the rapidly changing environment. Both team cohesion and altruistic behavior promoted resilience. Our research contributes to a growing understanding of the importance of resilience in the healthcare team. And provides a bridge between individual and organizational resilience.
在韧性工程领域,韧性已被确定为维持医疗保健系统的安全和绩效的能力,与预期、监测、适应和学习的韧性潜力一致。2020 年初,由于缺乏设备、供应中断和人员短缺,COVID-19 大流行对美国医疗保健系统的韧性提出了挑战。本定性研究的目的是描述 COVID-19 大流行期间医疗保健团队的韧性,将医疗保健团队视为一个有意识的、单一的知识来源,并由其集体身份、目的、能力和行动来定义,而不是个人或组织的韧性。
我们开发了一个描述性模型,该模型将医疗保健团队视为一个系统内的统一有意识实体,该系统旨在进行安全的患者护理。该模型结合了患者系统工程倡议(SEIPS)和高级团队决策(ADTM)模型的要素。我们采用定性描述性设计,并根据我们的改编模型,对美国各地的医疗保健团队成员进行了个人访谈。使用主题分析对数据进行分析,并在改编后的模型框架内组织提取的代码。
从美国各地的急性护理专业人员的访谈中确定了五个主题(N=22):高压锅下的团队合作,与高压环境下的工作一致;医疗保健团队凝聚力,将过去的经验应用于当前的挑战,与将过去的技能转移到当前情况一致;知识差距和利他行为,与团队的责任感和个人责任感一致。参与者描述了他们适应环境的能力如何受到不确定性、信息沟通不一致以及焦虑、恐惧、沮丧和压力等情绪的负面影响。与同事的凝聚力、技能的可转移性和利他行为增强了医疗保健团队的绩效。
在 COVID-19 前所未有的极端情况下工作,影响了医疗保健团队预测和适应快速变化环境的能力。团队凝聚力和利他行为都促进了韧性。我们的研究有助于加深对医疗保健团队韧性重要性的理解,并在个人和组织韧性之间架起了桥梁。