Abstract
Perioperative handoffs are high-risk events for miscommunications and poor care coordination, which cause patient harm. Extensive research and several interventions have sought to overcome the challenges to perioperative handoff quality and safety, but few efforts have focused on teamwork training. Evidence shows that team training decreases surgical morbidity and mortality, and there remains a significant opportunity to implement teamwork training in the perioperative environment. Current perioperative handoff interventions face significant difficulty with adherence which raises concerns about the sustainability of their impact. In this perspective article, we explain why teamwork is critical to safe and reliable perioperative handoffs and discuss implementation challenges to the five core components of teamwork training programs in the perioperative environment. We outline evidence-based best practices imperative for training success and acknowledge the obstacles to implementing those best practices. Explicitly identifying and discussing these obstacles is critical to designing and implementing teamwork training programs fit for the perioperative environment. Teamwork training will equip providers with the foundational teamwork competencies needed to effectively participate in handoffs and utilize handoff interventions. This will improve team effectiveness, adherence to current perioperative handoff interventions, and ultimately, patient safety.
Introduction
Patient handoffs are “real-time processes of passing patient-specific information from one caregiver to another or from one team of caregivers to another for the purpose of ensuring the continuity of the patient’s care” (The Joint Commission, 2017). Regulating bodies that oversee medical education recognize the importance of handoffs; the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) outlines requirements for transitions-in-care training during residency, and the Association of American Medical Colleges identifies patient handovers as an Entrustable Professional Activity that all medical students should be able to perform before residency (Obeso et al., 2017; ACGME, 2020). Hospital and patient safety organizations consider handoffs high-risk events for communication errors, contributing to sentinel events and significant malpractice costs (The Joint Commission, 2017; Humphrey et al., 2022). The perioperative environment is particularly vulnerable: a single operation requires at least two interprofessional handoffs—preoperative and postoperative—and many surgeries also require several intraoperative handoffs (Frasier et al., 2020; Meersch et al., 2022).
Teamwork skills are essential to addressing perioperative handoff quality and safety issues and delivering safe patient care. Evidence shows that teamwork improves patient, staff, and healthcare organizational outcomes (Rosen et al., 2018). Furthermore, meta-analytic evidence indicates that teamwork significantly impacts healthcare team performance (Schmutz et al., 2019). Recent conceptual models have illustrated that teamwork competencies are imperative to handoff effectiveness (Webster et al., 2022), and meta-analytic evidence shows that teamwork training significantly impacts reactions, learning, transfer, and results across healthcare contexts (i.e., organizational and patient outcomes; Hughes et al., 2016). In the perioperative environment, less frequent application of teamwork skills, such as sharing unique information and briefing, has been associated with increased complications and mortality (Segall et al., 2012). Additional meta-analytic evidence indicates that communication tools (e.g., checklists) improve teamwork and reduce mortality and morbidity in surgical contexts (Lyons and Popejoy, 2014). To improve organizational and patient outcomes in the perioperative realm, where teams are dynamic and patients experience frequent interprofessional handoffs during a high-risk, high-acuity, and high-pressure period, providers must demonstrate adaptability and excellence in teamwork competencies (Segall et al., 2012; Webster et al., 2022). Team science experts recommend teamwork training for medical teams to increase their adaptability to non-routine events (Bedwell et al., 2012), and this advice is particularly relevant for dynamic perioperative teams.
This perspective article discusses the importance of teamwork in perioperative handoffs and challenges to implementing teamwork training in this environment. We propose that teamwork training will improve team effectiveness, adherence to perioperative handoff interventions, and, ultimately, patient safety. Our article provides a foundation for improving teamwork training in perioperative contexts by outlining evidence-based best practices imperative for training success, while acknowledging obstacles to implementing those best practices. We assert that explicitly identifying and discussing these obstacles will provide a critical resource for designing and delivering teamwork training programs fit for the perioperative environment.
Importance of teamwork in interprofessional perioperative handoffs
Perioperative handoffs are particularly challenging due to this setting’s unique interdependence of interprofessional roles, acuity and complexity of care, handoff frequency, time constraints, and environmental distractions (Etherington et al., 2019; Abraham et al., 2021b; Michael et al., 2021). Previous interventions have improved perioperative handoff quality; however, high-quality studies demonstrating improved patient outcomes are still needed (Lyons and Popejoy, 2014; Abraham et al., 2021c,d; Stenquist et al., 2022). Furthermore, providers have difficulty adhering to perioperative handoff interventions due to time constraints, competing priorities, and the low perceived utility of these tools, which raises concerns about their sustainability (Abraham et al., 2021a; Burden et al., 2021). Providers need to be trained to effectively utilize such tools and appreciate their importance. For example, providers must learn to effectively employ skills such as structured and closed-loop communication, and asking clarifying questions to get the most out of a mnemonic handoff tool (Greilich et al., 2023). Perioperative team training has been associated with improved teamwork behaviors as well as decreased surgical morbidity and mortality (Neily et al., 2010; Weaver et al., 2010; Rhee et al., 2017). Despite this evidence, there remains a widespread lack of sustained team training in the perioperative space. A review by Raveendran et al. (2023) noted that most current interventions address only a few teamwork constructs and called for perioperative training programs that comprehensively address teamwork competencies and measure interprofessional outcomes. In response to The Joint Commission’s (2017) sentinel event alert, the Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation created guidelines for the execution and research of perioperative handoffs, concluding that teamwork training and attitude/behavior changes are essential for successful perioperative handoff interventions (Agarwala et al., 2019). Teaching teamwork competencies will foster the attitudes and behaviors needed to improve provider adherence to these interventions.
The perioperative space has a unique amalgamation of interprofessional roles working together to deliver care. The variety of professional identities, communication styles, educational backgrounds, competing priorities, and perceived hierarchies strain interprofessional teamwork (Etherington et al., 2019). Interprofessional team members contribute information disproportionately, and miscommunications occur more frequently during exchanges between different professions (Cumin et al., 2017; Keller et al., 2019). Perceived hierarchies contribute to this unequal information sharing by impacting psychological safety and team trust, which discourages certain members from speaking up (Cumin et al., 2017; Etherington et al., 2019; Keller et al., 2019). Poor uptake of perioperative handoff interventions may also result from limited team member engagement for the entirety of a handoff (Abraham et al., 2021b). Teamwork training will help overcome some of these obstacles by strengthening team members’ foundational teamwork competencies, such as recognizing the criticality of teamwork, creating a psychologically safe environment, establishing mutual trust, and optimizing team mental models to improve engagement (King et al., 2008; Greilich et al., 2023).
The perioperative environment requires many handoffs including pre-, intra-, and postoperative handoffs as well as intra- and interprofessional handoffs. Preoperative intraprofessional handoffs occur between the preoperative nurse and operating room circulating nurse, for example, while preoperative interprofessional handoffs may occur between the preoperative anesthesia team and the operative team. Some postoperative interprofessional examples include the operative team to the anesthesia provider and nurse in the post-anesthesia care unit or surgeon to the advanced practice provider in the intensive care unit (Frasier et al., 2020; Burden et al., 2021; Meersch et al., 2022). These handoffs provide multiple opportunities for poor care coordination which is exacerbated by the detailed information exchange required for perioperative patients. These patients are acutely vulnerable due to the inherent risks of undergoing anesthesia and invasive procedures and the severity of pathologies that merit surgical intervention (Devereaux and Sessler, 2015; Fernandez-Bustamante et al., 2017; Aminian et al., 2022; Talmasov and Klein, 2022). The performance requirements for surgical patient care result in time pressure within an individual patient’s care continuum and interpatient care, as multiple patients require high-level care simultaneously (Etherington et al., 2019; Göras et al., 2019). This time pressure often results in multitasking, which correlates with performance degradation and occurs almost 50% of the time during operative care (Göras et al., 2019; Modi et al., 2020). The high workload conditions created by time pressure causes team members to prioritize their own tasks, decrease attention to other team members’ needs, and disengage from activities that benefit the team and overall patient care (e.g., handoffs) if a direct correlation with their individual responsibilities is not clear (Shaw et al., 2010; Etherington et al., 2019). Furthermore, different interprofessional operative team members experience varying workloads and stress levels at different time points in care (Aouicha et al., 2020). Training providers in requisite teamwork competencies, such as the criticality of teamwork, mutual performance monitoring, debriefing, and mutual trust, will help address issues created by time pressure and care complexity (Greilich et al., 2023).
The aforementioned interprofessional nature, time pressure, and care demands of the perioperative environment produce many opportunities for interruptions and distractions that harm handoffs. Interruptions can range from technical tasks, such as managing equipment, to interpersonal, such as other providers initiating conversations about tasks unrelated to the patient at hand (Etherington et al., 2019; Göras et al., 2019; Aouicha et al., 2020; Frasier et al., 2020; Modi et al., 2020). Previous studies demonstrated that disruptions during perioperative handoffs occur frequently (~45% of the time; Frasier et al., 2020) and sometimes result in team members leaving the handoff, further impeding handoff intervention adherence (Abraham et al., 2021b). Providers equipped with the appropriate teamwork skills, such as closed-loop communication, optimizing team mental models, and reflection/debriefing, are more likely to reduce the frequency and impact of such interruptions, ensuring team effectiveness (Salas et al., 2008; Zajac et al., 2021; Greilich et al., 2023).
Challenges to implementing impactful teamwork training programs in the perioperative environment
While there is abundant evidence of the effectiveness of teamwork training and interventions in healthcare (Hughes et al., 2016), evidence in the perioperative environment is mixed (Turcotte et al., 2022), indicating potential issues with program implementation. A review by Teunissen et al. (2020) found that perioperative teamwork is not widely understood. Additionally, a systematic review by Turcotte et al. (2022) showed that current interprofessional perioperative interventions have not yet demonstrated improved provider satisfaction. To optimize the impact of team training in the perioperative environment, programs must meaningfully incorporate science-based learning and training best practices. Training transfer literature emphasizes the importance of what happens before, during, and after training. Healthcare organizations frequently focus on factors that occur during training. However, training science tells us that the most important aspects of training are those done before and after training (Salas et al., 2018). Program developers must consider five critical components that affect training outcomes: facilitator education, trainee composition, training timing, training evaluation, and supportive conditions (see Table 1). These components are resource-intensive and present major obstacles to successful training. Though they generally apply to all environments in need of team training, they are particularly critical in the perioperative realm. Below, we discuss these five components, the challenges to incorporating them, and the unique aspects of these challenges within the perioperative environment.
Table 1
| Challenge | Description |
|---|---|
| 1. Providing facilitator-led education | Utilizing a facilitated training method in conjunction with a train-the-trainer approach |
| 2. Coordinating interprofessional training | Training students and practicing professionals together to improve interdisciplinary (e.g., anesthesiologists, intensivists, surgeons) and interprofessional (e.g., nurses, nurse practitioners, physicians, physician assistants, respiratory therapists, surgical technicians) teamwork coordination and communication |
| 3. Training preclinically and longitudinally | Training preclinically with continual refresher trainings to ensure that effective behaviors are learned from the beginning and sustained over time |
| 4. Comprehensively evaluating training impact | Meaningfully evaluating the reactions, learning, transfer, and results of training preclinically, clinically, and post-graduation |
| 5. Creating supportive conditions to sustain behaviors | Establishing institutional and supervisory support (e.g., resources, policies, behavioral modeling) for teamwork training, behaviors, and initiatives |
Challenges to implementing teamwork training programs in the perioperative environment.
Challenge 1: Providing facilitator-led education
Successful training programs must include facilitators who are knowledgeable in training content and delivery. Existing best practices advise a train-the-trainer approach to ensure that facilitators successfully deliver the necessary knowledge and skills to trainees. Compared with self-study approaches, train-the-trainer strategies significantly improve provider adherence and competence (e.g., TeamSTEPPS™; King et al., 2008; Martino et al., 2011). Facilitators should represent all roles within the team (ex. anesthesiologists, intensivists, nurses, surgeons). However, facilitator-led training demands considerable resources: external facilitators require funding and lack contextual knowledge of the perioperative environment’s intricacies, whereas training internal facilitators delays training onset. Moreover, obtaining protected non-clinical time for perioperative providers to act as internal facilitators is particularly challenging. Teams of interprofessional providers must dedicate time to facilitator training and delivering the curriculum that would otherwise typically be spent teaching technical skills for the operative environment or providing operative services, which are high-value activities for hospitals (Best et al., 2020).
Challenge 2: Coordinating interprofessional training
Whenever possible, individuals in different yet interdependent interprofessional roles must train together. Interprofessional training increases program fidelity, i.e., the extent to which the simulation (e.g., training) and knowledge and skills learned match the simulated system (e.g., the perioperative environment; Farmer et al., 1999; Maran and Glavin, 2003). Interprofessional team training shows significant improvements in team knowledge, skills, and communication (Nelson et al., 2017). However, incorporating interprofessional training into the perioperative environment requires extensive coordination to balance the competing responsibilities of various roles and ensure that training activities do not disrupt operative services (Etherington et al., 2019; Abraham et al., 2021a). Training content must optimize relevance to all professions without limiting on-the-job context for each role. If the training content does not align with functional tasks, it can devastate transfer of trained behavior to the job, ultimately nullifying the effectiveness and significance of training (Hamstra et al., 2014).
Challenge 3: Training preclinically and longitudinally
Training best practices indicate it is imperative to consider training timing, specifically regarding career stages (e.g., undergraduate vs. graduate medical education) and the duration of training (e.g., a single workshop vs. progressive or recurring context-specific sessions). Despite the increasing prevalence of teamwork training initiatives in healthcare, standardized implementation of these efforts in healthcare education lags (Weaver et al., 2014; Buljac-Samardzic et al., 2020). Recent reviews substantiate that preclinical teamwork training is limited and call for health education programs to incorporate more teamwork training (Fox et al., 2018; Gordon et al., 2018; Vuurberg et al., 2019).
Individuals should learn teamwork competencies preclinically to establish a common language and appreciation for teamwork before they adopt ineffective team behavioral norms. Training efforts are less effective for established providers because existing knowledge and norms make learning and incorporating new material in practice more difficult (Anderson and Neely, 1996). Providers find unlearning ineffective team behaviors difficult for a multitude of reasons: they may struggle to break existing habits and routines and unlearn mental shortcuts (e.g., mindsets about how teamwork should be conducted), fear the unknown of new norms and their effect on patient safety, and lack awareness about the benefits of unlearning (Rushmer and Davies, 2004). These obstacles are exacerbated by the time pressure of the perioperative environment. However, it can be difficult to incorporate teamwork training into preclinical student course schedules and develop team training curricula applicable to all professions while maintaining training fidelity. Again, the acuity of care and time pressure in the perioperative environment impede the incorporation of critical training activities, like practice and debriefing, into students’ perioperative rotations. Additionally, while training preclinically is essential to improve teamwork capabilities for future providers, it does not address the gap in teamwork skills of practicing professionals. Introducing teamwork education and training at the preclinical level can address this issue by equipping learners with prerequisite skills to engage in on-the-job perioperative team training like NetworkZ and adapted version of TeamSTEPPS for the perioperative environment (Weaver et al., 2010; Rhee et al., 2017; Jowsey et al., 2019).
The intended duration of training is also important. Although few studies have sought the optimal interval for refresher teamwork training (Weaver et al., 2014), the existing literature does indicate that refresher training is needed to sustain teamwork skills in healthcare (Steinemann et al., 2011). A systematic review of teamwork training studies by Marlow et al. (2017) indicated that distributed training sessions can reinforce the importance of teamwork over time. While not focused on teamwork training, a systematic review of training in emergency care by Ameh et al. (2019) revealed that longer training programs were associated with greater skills improvement and asserted that knowledge and skills can be retained for up to a year, but repeat training and opportunities to practice improve retention (Ameh et al., 2019). Other clinical work research shows that knowledge and skills deteriorate as quickly as 3 to 6 months following training, implying that refresher training may be necessary after this duration (Mancini et al., 2010). Longitudinal teamwork training with refresher intervals requires dedicated resources (e.g., time away from practice, funding for facilitators) and coordination between practicing institutions and educational programs to ensure that content aligns with previous coursework. Previous reviews indicate that teamwork training typically occurs in single sessions, indicative of these resource challenges, which have amplified impact in perioperative spaces (Husebø and Akerjordet, 2016; Fox et al., 2018).
Challenge 4: Comprehensively evaluating training impact
Existing best practices urge incorporation of rigorous evaluation methods to track the effectiveness of training programs. A training program’s fidelity and impact on meaningful behavior changes and relevant outcomes cannot be determined without comprehensive evaluation. Currently, training program evaluations are mostly self-reported with some observational ratings (Fox et al., 2018; Li et al., 2018). These methods have varying degrees of reliability and validity (Li et al., 2018) and fail to capture the true outcomes of teamwork training. A review by Chakraborti et al. (2008) showed that most teamwork training programs failed to track teamwork or outcomes beyond the end of the program. A later systematic review found that only 40% of programs tracked outcomes, although several studies did track the transfer of teamwork skills up to 12 months post-training (Costar and Hall, 2020). Notably, this review included only 20 studies and excluded articles that included medical or nursing students.
The Kirkpatrick evaluation model considers four levels of evaluating training program effectiveness: reactions (trainee satisfaction and perceived utility of the training), learning (the knowledge and skills that trainees gain), transfer (the transfer of learned knowledge and skills to the work environment), and results (the training’s impact on individual, team, and organizational outcomes; Kirkpatrick, 1998). Training programs must be rigorously evaluated on all four levels to claim effectiveness. If data can support positive impacts on all levels, this presents a convincing argument for organizations to expend resources to support the training program. However, effective evaluation of each Kirkpatrick level can be time- and resource-intensive and require dedicated personnel. For example, handoff processes frequently involve electronic medical records, but using them to measure outcomes and skills transfer in the perioperative environment would require significant institutional investment in clinical informatics specialists for development (Abraham et al., 2023). The frequency of perioperative handoffs also obscures each dynamic team’s influence on patient outcomes. If some teams undergo team training but others do not, it is challenging to delineate the training’s impact on outcomes. Therefore, comprehensive training of all interprofessional providers involved in perioperative care is critical for accurate program evaluation.
Challenge 5: Creating supportive conditions to sustain behaviors
Improving perioperative handoff safety requires an environment conducive to teamwork. Local interventions at the unit level are often insufficient without institutional support, and previous perioperative teamwork interventions and systematic reviews of this work have consistently identified this as a crucial obstacle to program success (Jowsey et al., 2019; Teunissen et al., 2020; Keebler et al., 2022; Turcotte et al., 2022; Raveendran et al., 2023). Team members will continue to encounter challenges that increase errors if institutional structures do not allocate time and resources to conducting safe team-based handoffs. Meta-analytic findings substantiate that a supportive work environment is a critical predictor of learning transfer (Blume et al., 2010).
However, establishing conditions to sustain trained behaviors presents several challenges. Changing work culture is difficult and requires time and resources. Recent literature indicates that healthcare organizations must implement a multi-level approach, incorporating both top-down and bottom-up cultural change initiatives (Rosenbluth et al., 2018; Keebler et al., 2022). Leadership must provide support to ensure transfer of training (Grossman and Salas, 2011), consistently message teamwork as a priority, and provide infrastructure for teaming events to take place, such as resources for handoff tool integration into electronic medical records (Abraham et al., 2021a, 2023; Michael et al., 2021). Resources and existing policies must be in place to provide trainees with opportunities to perform and reinforce newly trained skills (Tracey and Tews, 2005; Grossman and Salas, 2011). Additionally, there must be appraisal, recognition, and reward systems to incentivize trainees, faculty, and staff to use their acquired knowledge and skills (Tracey and Tews, 2005).
If training is delivered preclinically, learners transitioning to practice will disperse to different perioperative teams and units or different healthcare systems entirely, where policies and norms affecting culture vary greatly. Institutions that deliver teamwork training can implement initiatives to improve their own culture to support trained behaviors, but widespread dissemination of such initiatives is needed to support learners in external organizations. Therefore, until programs are appropriately scaled, the measurement of longitudinal impact will be limited to preclinical learners that transition to practice within the same institution.
Discussion
Perioperative handoff interventions have become significantly more common in recent years; however, obstacles that limit provider adherence to these interventions threaten their sustainability and scalability. High-quality studies with sustainable interventions that demonstrate improved patient and provider outcomes remain elusive (Shahian et al., 2017; Abraham et al., 2021c; Burden et al., 2021; Riesenberg et al., 2022). Teamwork training is needed to enhance the sustainability of perioperative handoff interventions, and recent systematic reviews of perioperative teamwork training efforts call for robust, interprofessional programs that address the obstacles described above (Teunissen et al., 2020; Turcotte et al., 2022; Raveendran et al., 2023).
Many challenges in the perioperative environment affect patient handoffs, including interprofessional interdependence, handoff frequency, care acuity, time pressure, and environmental distractions (Etherington et al., 2019; Abraham et al., 2021b; Michael et al., 2021; Lazzara et al., 2022). Foundational teamwork training for all providers in perioperative handoffs will improve their ability to manage and overcome these challenges and, therefore, improve handoffs (Salas et al., 2008; Greilich et al., 2023). However, there are significant obstacles to delivering effective teamwork training, including barriers to facilitator-led education, appropriate timing and frequency of training delivery, delivery to an interprofessional audience, providing meaningful evaluation, and fostering conditions to sustain learned teamwork behaviors.
Addressing the complexities of teamwork in the perioperative environment poses an exciting opportunity to improve handoffs and meaningfully impact patient and provider outcomes. For example, though frequent handoffs create a challenge for teamwork, they also allow for repetitive practice and reflection on trained behaviors. This unique, high-need environment offers the ability to implement truly interprofessional interventions where miscommunications and poor coordination can cause life- and limb-threatening errors (The Joint Commission, 2017; Humphrey et al., 2022). The competencies acquired through effective teamwork training can be applied to handoffs as well as other critical teaming events in the perioperative environment, such as huddles, debriefs, and multidisciplinary rounds. Although the components discussed above present considerable obstacles to implementation, acknowledging their importance and discussing their associated challenges is the first step to building more meaningful, sustainable, and impactful teamwork training programs in the perioperative environment.
Conclusion
Teamwork is critical to providing effective and reliable perioperative handoffs. Perioperative providers must be equipped with foundational teamwork competencies to improve team effectiveness, adherence to handoff interventions, and, ultimately, patient safety. To achieve sustained impact, user-centered training interventions must address the identified challenges of teamwork training in the perioperative environment.
Funding
The Quality Enhancement Plan: Team FIRST is an internally funded five-year program at UT Southwestern Medical Center for the fulfillment of an accreditation requirement of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.
Publisher’s note
All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.
Statements
Data availability statement
The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article/supplementary material, further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding authors.
Author contributions
SP and MK made significant contributions to the literature review, manuscript drafting, and revision. OH, JH, and AM provided critical reviews and revision guidance. PG and ES provided conceptual guidance and critical reviews of the manuscript. All authors have made substantial contributions to the conception, drafting, and revision of the manuscript and approved the final version for submission.
Acknowledgments
The conceptualization of this article was made possible through the collaborative efforts of the UT Southwestern Medical Center Quality Enhancement Plan: Team FIRST. We would like to recognize the contributions of Elizabeth Hamilton, MD, Meghan Michael, MD, and Neethu Chandran, MD, for their contributions to exploring teamwork in perioperative handoffs; Kim Hoggatt Krumwiede, PhD, as a former Associate Dean of Academic Affairs; David Klocko, DMSc, MPAS, BSPA, as a Distinguished Teaching Professor for the UT Southwestern School of Health Professions; Robert Rege, MD, as an Associate Dean of Undergraduate Medical Education for UT Southwestern Medical School; Gary Reed, MD, MSc, as an Associate Dean of Quality, Safety and Outcomes Education; and Scott Tannenbaum, PhD and Elizabeth Lazzara, PhD for their guidance regarding teamwork training program design and assessment.
Conflict of interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
References
1
AbrahamJ.DuffyC.KandasamyM.FranceD.GreilichP. E. (2023). An evidence synthesis on perioperative handoffs: a call for balanced sociotechnical solutions. Int. J. Med. Inform.174:105038. doi: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2023.105038
2
AbrahamJ.KingC. R.MengA. (2021a). Ascertaining design requirements for postoperative care transition interventions. Appl. Clin. Inform.12, 107–115. doi: 10.1055/s-0040-1721780
3
AbrahamJ.MengA.SonaC.WildesT.AvidanM.KannampallilT. (2021b). An observational study of postoperative handoff standardization failures. Int. J. Med. Inform.151:104458. doi: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2021.104458
4
AbrahamJ.MengA.TripathyS.AvidanM. S.KannampallilT. (2021c). Systematic review and meta-analysis of interventions for operating room to intensive care unit handoffs. BMJ Qual. Saf.30, 513–524. doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2020-012474
5
AbrahamJ.PfeiferE.DoeringM.AvidanM. S.KannampallilT. (2021d). Systematic review of intraoperative anesthesia handoffs and handoff tools. Anesth. Analg.132, 1563–1575. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000005367
6
Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (2020), ACGME Common Program Requirements (Residency). 47–48. Available at: https://www.acgme.org/globalassets/PFAssets/ProgramRequirements/CPRResidency2020.pdf. (Accessed March 14, 2023).
7
AgarwalaA. V.Lane-FallM. B.GreilichP. E.BurdenA. R.AmbardekarA. P.BanerjeeA.et al. (2019). Consensus recommendations for the conduct, training, implementation, and research of perioperative handoffs. Anesth. Analg.128, e71–e78. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000004118
8
AmehC. A.MdegelaM.WhiteS.van den BroekN. (2019). The effectiveness of training in emergency obstetric care: a systematic literature review. Health Policy Plan.34, 257–270. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czz028
9
AminianA.WilsonR.Al-KurdA.TuC.MilinovichA.KrohM.et al. (2022). Association of bariatric surgery with cancer risk and mortality in adults with obesity. JAMA327, 2423–2433. doi: 10.1001/jama.2022.9009
10
AndersonM. C.NeelyJ. H. (1996). “Interference and inhibition in memory retrieval,” in Memory. eds. BjorkE. L.BjorkR. A. (Academic Press), 237–313.
11
AouichaW.TliliM. A.SahliJ.LimamM.DhiabM. B.ChelbiS.et al. (2020). Differences between surgical team members in terms of teamwork, workload and stress. Eur. J. Pub. Health30:ckaa166.889. doi: 10.1093/eurpub/ckaa166.550
12
BedwellW. L.RamsayP. S.SalasE. (2012). Helping fluid teams work: a research agenda for effective team adaptation in healthcare. Transl. Behav. Med.2, 504–509. doi: 10.1007/s13142-012-0177-9
13
BestM. J.McFarlandE. G.AndersonG. F.SrikumaranU. (2020). The likely economic impact of fewer elective surgical procedures on US hospitals during the COVID-19 pandemic. Surgery168, 962–967. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2020.07.014
14
BlumeB. D.FordJ. K.BaldwinT. T.HuangJ. L. (2010). Transfer of Training: A Meta-Analytic Review. J. Manage.36, 1065–1105. doi: 10.1177/0149206309352880
15
Buljac-SamardzicM.DoekhieK. D.van WijngaardenJ. D. (2020). Interventions to improve team effectiveness within health care: a systematic review of the past decade. Hum. Resour. Health18:2. doi: 10.1186/s12960-019-0411-3
16
BurdenA.PotestioC.PukenasE. (2021). Influence of perioperative handoffs on complications and outcomes. Adv. Anesth.39, 133–148. doi: 10.1016/j.aan.2021.07.008
17
ChakrabortiC.BoonyasaiR. T.WrightS. M.KernD. E. (2008). A systematic review of teamwork training interventions in medical student and resident education. J. Gen. Intern. Med.23, 846–853. doi: 10.1007/s11606-008-0600-6
18
CostarD. M.HallK. K. (2020). Improving team performance and patient safety on the job through team training and performance support tools: a systematic review. J. Patient Saf.16, S48–S56. doi: 10.1097/PTS.0000000000000746
19
CuminD.SkiltonC.WellerJ. (2017). Information transfer in multidisciplinary operating room teams: a simulation-based observational study. BMJ Qual. Saf.26, 209–216. doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2015-005130
20
DevereauxP. J.SesslerD. I. (2015). Cardiac complications in patients undergoing major noncardiac surgery. N. Engl. J. Med.373, 2258–2269. doi: 10.1056/NEJMra1502824
21
EtheringtonC.WuM.Cheng-BoivinO.LarriganS.BoetS. (2019). Interprofessional communication in the operating room: a narrative review to advance research and practice. Can. J. Anaesth.66, 1251–1260. doi: 10.1007/s12630-019-01413-9
22
FarmerE.van RooijJ.RiemersmaJ.JornaP.MoraalJ. (1999). Handbook of simulator based training. Aldershot, Hampshire, UK: Ashgate; 384.
23
Fernandez-BustamanteA.FrendlG.SprungJ.KorD. J.SubramaniamB.Martinez RuizR.et al. (2017). Postoperative pulmonary complications, early mortality, and hospital stay following noncardiothoracic surgery: a multicenter study by the perioperative research network investigators. JAMA Surg.152, 157–166. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2016.4065
24
FoxL.OndersR.Hermansen-KobulnickyC. J.NguyenT. N.MyranL.LinnB.et al. (2018). Teaching interprofessional teamwork skills to health professional students: a scoping review. J. Interprof. Care32, 127–135. doi: 10.1080/13561820.2017.1399868
25
FrasierL. L.Pavuluri QuammeS. R.WiegmannD.GreenbergC. C. (2020). Evaluation of intraoperative hand-off frequency, duration, and context: a mixed methods analysis. J. Surg. Res.256, 124–130. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2020.06.007
26
GörasC.OlinK.UnbeckM.Pukk-HärenstamK.EhrenbergA.TessmaM. K. (2019). Tasks, multitasking and interruptions among the surgical team in an operating room: a prospective observational study. BMJ Open9:e026410. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-026410
27
GordonM.HillE.StojanJ. N.DanielM. (2018). Educational interventions to improve handover in health care: an updated systematic review. Acad. Med.93, 1234–1244. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002236
28
GreilichP. E.KilcullenM.PaquetteS.LazzaraE. H.ScielzoS.HernandezJ.et al. (2023). Team FIRST framework: Identifying Core teamwork competencies critical to Interprofessional healthcare curricula. J. Clin. Transl. Sci.7:e106. doi: 10.1017/cts.2023.27
29
GrossmanR.SalasE. (2011). The transfer of training: What really matters. Int. J. Train.Dev.15, 103–120. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-2419.2011.00373.x
30
HamstraS. J.BrydgesR.HatalaR.ZendejasB.CookD. A. (2014). Reconsidering fidelity in simulation-based training. Acad. Med.89, 387–392. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000000130
31
HughesA. M.GregoryM. E.JosephD. L.SoneshS. C.MarlowS. L.LacerenzaC. N.et al. (2016). Saving lives: a meta-analysis of team training in healthcare. J. Appl. Psychol.101, 1266–1304. doi: 10.1037/apl0000120
32
HumphreyK. E.SundbergM.MillirenC. E.GrahamD. A.LandriganC. P. (2022). Frequency and nature of communication and handoff failures in medical malpractice claims. J. Patient Saf.18, 130–137. doi: 10.1097/PTS.0000000000000937
33
HusebøS. E.AkerjordetK. (2016). Quantitative systematic review of multi-professional teamwork and leadership training to optimize patient outcomes in acute hospital settings. J. Adv. Nurs.72, 2980–3000. doi: 10.1111/jan.13035
34
JowseyT.BeaverP.LongJ.CivilI.GardenA. L.HendersonK.et al. (2019). Towards a safer culture: implementing multidisciplinary simulation-based team training in New Zealand operating theatres - a framework analysis. BMJ Open9:e027122. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-027122
35
KeeblerJ. R.LazzaraE.GriggsA.TannenbaumS.FernandezR.GreilichP.et al. (2022). Holistic strategy for promoting effective handoffs. BMJ Lead. doi: 10.1136/leader-2022-000639 [E-pub ahead of print].
36
KellerS.TschanF.SemmerN. K.Timm-HolzerE.ZimmermannJ.CandinasD.et al. (2019). "Disruptive behavior" in the operating room: a prospective observational study of triggers and effects of tense communication episodes in surgical teams. PLoS One14:e0226437. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0226437
37
KingH. B.BattlesJ.BakerD. P.AlonsoA.SalasE.WebsterJ.et al. (2008). “TeamSTEPPS: team strategies and tools to enhance performance and patient safety” in Advances in patient safety: New directions and alternative approaches (volume 3: Performance and tools). eds. HenriksenK.BattlesJ. B.KeyesM. A.GradyM. L.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21249942
38
KirkpatrickD. L. (1998). “The four levels of evaluation” in Evaluating corporate training: Models and issues. eds. BrownS.SeidnerC. (San Francisco: Springer, Dordrecht), 95–122.
39
LazzaraE. H.SimonsonR. J.GisickL. M.GriggsA. C.RickelE. A.WahrJ.et al. (2022). Does standardisation improve post-operative anaesthesia handoffs? Meta-analyses on provider, patient, organisational, and handoff outcomes. Ergonomics65, 1138–1153. doi: 10.1080/00140139.2021.2020341
40
LiN.MarshallD.SykesM.McCullochP.ShalhoubJ.MaruthappuM. (2018). Systematic review of methods for quantifying teamwork in the operating theatre. BJS Open2, 42–51. doi: 10.1002/bjs5.40
41
LyonsV. E.PopejoyL. L. (2014). Meta-analysis of surgical safety checklist effects on teamwork, communication, morbidity, mortality, and safety. West. J. Nurs. Res.36, 245–261. doi: 10.1177/0193945913505782
42
ManciniM. E.SoarJ.BhanjiF.BilliJ. E.DennettJ.FinnJ.et al. (2010). Part 12: education, implementation, and teams: 2010 international consensus on cardiopulmonary resuscitation and emergency cardiovascular care science with treatment recommendations. Circulation122, S539–S581. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.110.971143
43
MaranN. J.GlavinR. J. (2003). Low- to high-fidelity simulation—a continuum of medical education?Med. Educ.37, 22–28. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2923.37.s1.9.x
44
MarlowS. L.HughesA. M.SoneshS. C.GregoryM. E.LacerenzaC. N.BenishekL. E.et al. (2017). A systematic review of team training in health care: ten questions. Jt. Comm. J. Qual. Patient Saf.43, 197–204. doi: 10.1016/j.jcjq.2016.12.004
45
MartinoS.BallS. A.NichC.Canning-BallM.RounsavilleB. J.CarrollK. M. (2011). Teaching community program clinicians motivational interviewing using expert and train-the-trainer strategies. Addiction106, 428–441. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2010.03135.x
46
MeerschM.WeissR.KullmarM.BergmannL.ThompsonA.GriepL.et al. (2022). Effect of intraoperative handovers of anesthesia care on mortality, readmission, or postoperative complications among adults: the HandiCAP randomized clinical trial. JAMA327, 2403–2412. doi: 10.1001/jama.2022.9451
47
MichaelM. M.AmbardekarA. P.PukenasE.KaramchandaniK.NguyenH.PotestioC. P.et al. (2021). Enablers and barriers to multicenter perioperative handoff collaboration: lessons learned from a successful model outside the operating room. Anesth. Analg.133, 1358–1363. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000005724
48
ModiH. N.SinghH.DarziA.LeffD. R. (2020). Multitasking and Time Pressure in the Operating Room: Impact on Surgeons’ Brain Function. Ann. Surg.272, 648–657. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000004208
49
NeilyJ.MillsP. D.Young-XuY.CarneyB. T.WestP.BergerD. H.et al. (2010). Association between implementation of a medical team training program and surgical mortality. JAMA304, 1693–1700. doi: 10.1001/jama.2010.1506
50
NelsonS.WhiteC. F.HodgesB. D.TassoneM. (2017). Interprofessional team training at the prelicensure level: a review of the literature. Acad. Med.92, 709–716. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000001435
51
ObesoV.BrownD.AiyerM.BarronB.BullJ.CarterT.et al. (2017). Core EPAs for entering residency pilot program. Toolkits for the 13 Core Entrustable professional activities for entering residency. Washington, DC: Association of American Medical Colleges. Available at: https://www.aamc.org/initiatives/coreepas/publicationsandpresentations (Accessed March 15, 2023).
52
RaveendranL.McGuireC. S.GazminS.BeikoD.MartinL. J. (2023). The who, what, and how of teamwork research in medical operating rooms: a scoping review. J. Interprof. Care37, 504–514. doi: 10.1080/13561820.2022.2058917
53
RheeA. J.Valentin-SalgadoY.EshakD.FeldmanD.KischakP.ReichD. L.et al. (2017). Team training in the perioperative arena: a methodology for implementation and auditing behavior. Am. J. Med. Qual.32, 369–375. doi: 10.1177/1062860616662703
54
RiesenbergL. A.DavisR.HengA.Vong do RosarioC.O'HaganE. C.Lane-FallM. (2022). Anesthesiology patient handoff education interventions: a systematic review. Jt. Comm. J. Qual. Patient Saf. doi: 10.1016/j.jcjq.2022.12.002
55
RosenM. A.DiazGranadosD.DietzA. S.BenishekL. E.ThompsonD.PronovostP. J.et al. (2018). Teamwork in healthcare: key discoveries enabling safer, high-quality care. Am. Psychol.73, 433–450. doi: 10.1037/amp0000298
56
RosenbluthG.DestinoL. A.StarmerA. J.LandriganC. P.SpectorN. D.SectishT. C.et al. (2018). I-PASS Handoff Program: Use of a Campaign to Effect Transformational Change. Pediatr. Qual. Saf.3:e088. doi: 10.1097/pq9.0000000000000088
57
RushmerR.DaviesH. T. (2004). Unlearning in health care. Qual. Saf. Health Care13 Suppl 2, ii10–ii15. doi: 10.1136/qshc.2003.009506
58
SalasE.DiazGranadosD.WeaverS. J.KingH. (2008). Does team training work? Principles for health care. Acad. Emerg. Med.15, 1002–1009. doi: 10.1111/j.1553-2712.2008.00254.x
59
SalasE.ZajacS.MarlowS. L. (2018). Transforming health care one team at a time: ten observations and the trail ahead. Group Org. Manag.43, 357–381. doi: 10.1177/1059601118756554
60
SchmutzJ. B.MeierL. L.ManserT. (2019). How effective is teamwork really? The relationship between teamwork and performance in healthcare teams: a systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ Open9:e028280. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-028280
61
SegallN.BonifacioA. S.SchroederR. A.BarbeitoA.RogersD.ThornlowD. K.et al. (2012). Can we make postoperative patient handovers safer? A systematic review of the literature. Anesth. Analg.115, 102–115. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0b013e318253af4b
62
ShahianD. M.McEachernK.RossiL.ChisariR. G.MortE. (2017). Large-scale implementation of the I-PASS handover system at an academic medical centre. BMJ Qual. Saf.26, 760–770. doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2016-006195
63
ShawT. H.MatthewsG.WarmJ. S.FinomoreV. S.SilvermanL.CostaP. T.Jr. (2010). Individual differences in vigilance: personality, ability and states of stress. J. Res. Pers.44, 297–308. doi: 10.1016/j.jrp.2010.02.007
64
SteinemannS.BergB.SkinnerA.DiTulioA.AnzelonK.TeradaK.et al. (2011). In situ, multidisciplinary, simulation-based teamwork training improves early trauma care. J. Surg. Educ.68, 472–477. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2011.05.009
65
StenquistD. S.YeungC. M.SzaparyH. J.RossiL.ChenA. F.HarrisM. B. (2022). Sustained improvement in quality of patient handoffs after orthopaedic surgery I-PASS intervention. J Am Acad Orthop Surg Glob Res Rev6:e22.00079. doi: 10.5435/JAAOSGlobal-D-22-00079
66
TalmasovD.KleinJ. P. (2022). Neurologic complications of surgery and anesthesia. Neurol. Clin.40, 191–209. doi: 10.1016/j.ncl.2021.08.014
67
TeunissenC.BurrellB.MaskillV. (2020). Effective surgical teams: an integrative literature review. West. J. Nurs. Res.42, 61–75. doi: 10.1177/0193945919834896
68
The Joint Commission. (2017) Inadequate hand-off communication. Sentinel Event Alert58: 1–6. Available at: https://www.jointcommission.org/-/media/tjc/documents/resources/patient-safety-topics/sentinel-event/sea_58_hand_off_comms_9_6_17_final_(1).pdf. (Accessed March 13, 2023).
69
TraceyJ. B.TewsM. J. (2005). Construct validity of a general training climate scale. Organ. Res. Methods8, 353–374. doi: 10.1177/1094428105280055
70
TurcotteM.EtheringtonC.RoweJ.DuongA.KaurM.TalbotZ.et al. (2022). Effectiveness of interprofessional teamwork interventions for improving occupational well-being among perioperative healthcare providers: a systematic review. J. Interprof. Care1-18, 1–18. doi: 10.1080/13561820.2022.2137116
71
VuurbergG.VosJ. A. M.ChristophL. H.De VosR. (2019). The effectiveness of interprofessional classroom-based education in medical curricula: a systematic review. J. Interprof. Educ. Pract.15, 157–167. doi: 10.1016/j.xjep.2019.01.007
72
WeaverS. J.DyS. M.RosenM. A. (2014). Team-training in healthcare: a narrative synthesis of the literature. BMJ Qual. Saf.23, 359–372. doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2013-001848
73
WeaverS. J.RosenM. A.DiazGranadosD.LazzaraE. H.LyonsR.SalasE.et al. (2010). Does teamwork improve performance in the operating room? A multilevel evaluation. Jt. Comm. J. Qual. Patient Saf.36, 133–142. doi: 10.1016/s1553-7250(10)36022-3
74
WebsterK. L. W.KeeblerJ. R.LazzaraE. H.ChaparroA.GreilichP.FagerlundA. (2022). Handoffs and teamwork: a framework for care transition communication. Jt. Comm. J. Qual. Patient Saf.48, 343–353. doi: 10.1016/j.jcjq.2022.04.001
75
ZajacS.WoodsA.TannenbaumS.SalasE.HolladayC. L. (2021). Overcoming challenges to teamwork in healthcare: a team effectiveness framework and evidence-based guidance. Front. Commun.6:6. doi: 10.3389/fcomm.2021.606445
Summary
Keywords
teamwork, team training, interprofessional, handoffs, perioperative, healthcare education, implemenation, patient safety
Citation
Paquette S, Kilcullen M, Hoffman O, Hernandez J, Mehta A, Salas E and Greilich PE (2023) Handoffs and the challenges to implementing teamwork training in the perioperative environment. Front. Psychol. 14:1187262. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1187262
Received
15 March 2023
Accepted
16 May 2023
Published
15 June 2023
Volume
14 - 2023
Edited by
Juliane E. Kämmer, University of Bern, Switzerland
Reviewed by
Jennifer Weller, The University of Auckland, New Zealand; Keri L. Heitner, Saybrook University, United States
Updates
Copyright
© 2023 Paquette, Kilcullen, Hoffman, Hernandez, Mehta, Salas and Greilich.
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Shannon Paquette, shanpaqu@gmail.comPhilip E. Greilich, Philip.Greilich@UTSouthwestern.edu
†These authors have contributed equally to this work and share senior authorship
Disclaimer
All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.