Post-crisis debriefing: A tool for improving quality in the medical emergency team system

Intensive and Critical Care Nursing(2021)

Cited 10|Views25
No score
Abstract
Objectives: To examine clinicians? perception of quality of technical and non-technical response to emergencies and application of post crisis debriefing. Design: Descriptive, anonymous, self-reporting survey on the needs and perception of a post-crisis debriefing implementation. Setting: Multi-specialist medical institute in Italy focused on solid organ transplantation and organ failure support. Main outcomes: Perception of application of guidelines and evaluation of debriefing implementation during in-hospital emergencies. Results: Response rate to the survey was 25% (148 health care workers). Of all respondents, 86% were employed 10 years, 75% were involved in < 5 emergencies over the previous year. Resuscitation guidelines were considered fully applied by 55%; 64% of respondents considered the teaching programme as sufficient. Of all participants, 97% were aware of the importance of teamwork dynamics, 79% were aware of the importance of the personal performance, and 52% considered emergencies as valid opportunities for professional growth. Leadership was considered important by 45% of respondents; debriefing implemented by 41%, and considered a potentially useful tool by 85%. Conclusion: Post-crisis debriefing is away to diffuse self-reflective and life-long learning culture; it is perceived as a powerful tool for improving quality of the rapid response system by the vast majority of those surveyed.(c) 2020 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
More
Translated text
Key words
Emergency,ICU,Intensive care medicine,Communication,Leadership,Teamwork,Crisis resource management,Patient safety
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined