Importance Team members speaking-up by raising concerns about inappropriate or unsafe actions of others within the team can have direct, immediate, and preventive effect on adverse outcomes. However, little is known about the hurdles and enablers of this behavior in healthcare, especially within the operating room setting. Objective 1\. Determine if an educational workshop would improve speaking-up behaviors of practicing anesthesiologists when presented with realistically-simulated clinical situations. 2.Describe speaking-up behaviors addressed to a surgeon, a nurse, and a colleague. 3. Identify the self-reported hurdles and enablers for speaking-up in those situations encountered. Design Randomized controlled experiment of an educational workshop intervention on communication behaviors in a simulated case. Qualitative analysis of debriefing conversations following the simulated case. Setting Established academic simulation center Participants Seventy-one practicing anesthesiologists from four academic medical centers and one community hospital Intervention Fifty minute educational workshop on speaking-up that included rationale, conversational techniques, a rubric for speaking-up, and role-play.
Main Outcomes and Measures 1\. Observed communication in a simulated case that included a surgeon falling asleep during surgery, inappropriate activation of a speakerphone by a nurse, and an incorrect treatment order by a colleague in response to a venous air embolism. 2. Transcribed conversation during a structured debriefing, analyzed for hurdles and enablers.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
310
Educational workshop including lecture, discussion, role-play Concepts include: 2-challenge rule, pairing advocacy and inquiry
Unrelated Education (CPR workshop) including: lecture, discussion Topics covered: Cardiac Life Support algorithms, CPR, Medications
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Speaking-Up Behavior
Subjects were assessed by trained raters as to whether they spoke-up when safety related errors were made during a realistic simulation case.
Time frame: Immediate
Speaking-up Behaviors
Anesthesiologist subject's behavior in speaking-up to a surgeon, nurse, and colleague during a realistic simulation case were assessed descriptively.
Time frame: Immediate
Self-reported hurdles and enablers of speaking-up
A qualitative analysis of stated hurdles or enablers for speaking-up or not was conducted from video recordings of a post-case structured debriefing.
Time frame: 1 hour
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