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Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Patient Hand-offs: A Medical Education Perspective Ingrid Philibert, PhD, MBA, Sr. VP, Field Activities, ACGME The greatest problem with communication is the illusion that it has been accomplished. George Bernard Shaw

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Page 1: Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Patient Hand-offs: A Medical Education Perspective Ingrid Philibert, PhD, MBA, Sr. VP, Field Activities,

Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education

Patient Hand-offs: A Medical Education Perspective

Ingrid Philibert, PhD, MBA, Sr. VP, Field Activities, ACGME

The greatest problem with communication is the illusion that it has been accomplished. George Bernard Shaw

Page 2: Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Patient Hand-offs: A Medical Education Perspective Ingrid Philibert, PhD, MBA, Sr. VP, Field Activities,

Why is the Hand-off of Interest?

Sentinel Event: Unanticipated event that results in death or serious physical or psychological injury to a patient and is not

related to the natural course of the patient’s illness

Page 3: Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Patient Hand-offs: A Medical Education Perspective Ingrid Philibert, PhD, MBA, Sr. VP, Field Activities,

Why is the Hand-off of Interest?(2)

• Across several studies communication problems implicated in 60 to 75% of all errors and adverse events

• Communication problems as source of errors, more prominent in teaching settings, larger number of factors implicated in each event (supervision, hand-off, team care)1

• Miscommunication incidence per ICU patient: 100%2

• Adverse effects of being cared for by cross-covering physician3

• Consequence: Reduction in errors from reduced hours may be offset by increased errors from inadequate exchange of information during the patient hand-off1 Singh et al., Arch Intern Med, 2007 2 Mistry, K et al., University of North Carolina, ACGME Conference 2006 3 Petersen, LA et al. Ann Intern Med, 1994

Page 4: Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Patient Hand-offs: A Medical Education Perspective Ingrid Philibert, PhD, MBA, Sr. VP, Field Activities,

Technology and Strategies from High-Reliability Industries

• Use of electronic tools improved the hand-off process1

• Use of “sign-out forms” may reduce preventable adverse events2

• End of shift transfers from high-reliability industries may offer helpful models for the patient hand-off3

• Combining hospital IT data with resident-entered details could be a powerful tool to improve hand-offs4

• Yet no practical strategies to date to connect these learnings to every-day teaching of residents1Parker J, et al. JAMIA. 2000; 7(5): 453-61

2Petersen LA, et al. JCJQI. 1998; 24(2): 77-873 Patterson E, et al. Int Journ Qual Hlth Care 2004, 16: 125-132. 4 Van Eaton, E et al. Surgery 2004; 136(1): 14-5

Page 5: Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Patient Hand-offs: A Medical Education Perspective Ingrid Philibert, PhD, MBA, Sr. VP, Field Activities,

2006-08 Hand-off Study

Summary Findings

• Hand-off is a clinical as well as a communication task

• Strategies from high-reliability industries are adapted to the mobile, fluid nature of residents’ work and the focus on multiple patients with differing needs for attention and care

• Results affirmed the importance of the interactive verbal transfer of information

• Time constraints, working patterns and interpersonal factors such as trust influenced the hand-off

• Use of short cuts: focus on plans and contingencies (suggests most of the information in current hand-off summaries is not used)

• Use of technology to support transfer both helpful and problematic

Page 6: Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Patient Hand-offs: A Medical Education Perspective Ingrid Philibert, PhD, MBA, Sr. VP, Field Activities,

Summary Findings (2)• Verbal hand-offs increasingly foregone in some settings, replaced with: hand-off

by phone, outgoing leaves electronic note or paper, option to page for questions rarely used

• Current technology to support hand-offs not adapted to filling in for the loss off interactive exchange of information (there are open web-based approaches)

• After duty hour limits: Almost everything “signed out.” Two exceptions in 2006, largely eroded by 2010: staff consults, communicating with families

• “Read-back” not used, not effective. Instead, more subtle cueing in conversations to highlight important data

• Critical role of “others with extensive knowledge of the patient” in recovering information lost in the hand-off

• Negative effect of cross-cover (replicates Petersen et al. 1994); short shifts not associated with appreciable “loss of continuity”

Page 7: Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Patient Hand-offs: A Medical Education Perspective Ingrid Philibert, PhD, MBA, Sr. VP, Field Activities,

Summary Findings: Resident Learning Process

• The Intern: “Everything in the hand-off is important, but I cannot remember it all or use it all in patient care.”

• The Mid-level Resident: “Nothing in the hand-off is important, I get my information from a fresh look at the patient (the Consult Effect).”

• The Senior Resident: “The information from the outgoing resident AND the patient are important. I look for the comments in the hand-off to determined who needs special vigilance. Both cues are important for sick patients.”

• Effect of level of training: pronounced from 1st to 2nd year, negligible after (handoff is learned somewhere in the first year)

• At more advanced levels information is evaluated based on the whether it comes from a “trusted source” (assessment based on prior interactions)

Page 8: Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Patient Hand-offs: A Medical Education Perspective Ingrid Philibert, PhD, MBA, Sr. VP, Field Activities,

Odds of Errors under Different Shift Patterns, Other Factors

Odds Ratio

95% CI P Value

In-House Call .35 .195-.630 .000

Cross Cover only 4.42 1.99-9.87 .001

Call and Cross Cover 6.20 3.106-12.390 .000

Any Shift with Cross Cover 4.77 2.416-9.407 .000

AY Quarter 1 1.607 .812-3.183 .186

ICU .22 .087-.558 .001

Incoming Low Rating of Quality of Hand-off

2.432 1.201-4.931 .018

Page 9: Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Patient Hand-offs: A Medical Education Perspective Ingrid Philibert, PhD, MBA, Sr. VP, Field Activities,

Consequences of Hand-off “Surprises” and Errors

Very Common

• Not knowing critical information, resulting in feeling unhelpful and loss of credibility with care team or family

• “Not knowing patient well” and having to look up information when the patient is deteriorating

Quite Frequently mentioned

• Omission of or delay in tests, therapeutic interventions or discharge (“To do list errors of omission)

• Duplication of tests and therapies resulting in waste of time and resources (“To do list errors of commission)

Rare but Concerning

• “Failure to Rescue” (failing to noticing a patient is deteriorating)

• Wrong intervention for the patient (e.g., wrong treatment or medication due to outdated or erroneous information, coding patient who is DNR)

Page 10: Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Patient Hand-offs: A Medical Education Perspective Ingrid Philibert, PhD, MBA, Sr. VP, Field Activities,

State of Affairs in 2011

• Teaching of hand-offs is episodic, sporadic and not connected to clinical work and teaching , despite sincere, well-meaning efforts to interpret and follow the new ACGME Standards on “Transitions in Care”

• More hand-off teaching and improvement work in specialties with inpatient based approaches, to address “end of shift” hand-offs

• Other transitions in care (hand-off from OR to ICU or unit, inter-unit, etc.) not as well addressed

• ACGME standards seek to address all transitions in care

• Faculty may not be the ideal teachers in many specialties (lack of training, and a perspective of “I do not need to hand-off, I am available to my patient 24/7”)

• Added value of near-peer teaching from a pedagogical perspective

Page 11: Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Patient Hand-offs: A Medical Education Perspective Ingrid Philibert, PhD, MBA, Sr. VP, Field Activities,

Proposed Solution: Embedding Hand-off in Clinical Teaching

• A structured approach to educate residents on hand-offs via a curricular blueprint

• Activities to learn and improve hand-offs are progressive from internship to the end of resident and continue into the work of clinical faculty

• View of hand-off as entrustable professional activity (EPA)• Supervision of hand-offs (direct or indirect, by more senior residents) until an entrustment

decision is made based on an assessment of performance

• A “milestone” perspective would expect entrustment of common hand-offs in the specialty to occur by end of the first year

• This embeds teaching of the hand of the hand-off in the process by which other clinical skills are taught

• Bottom Line: Innovation in handoff education and improvement in hospital systems to support the hand-off are necessary components to adapt to an increasingly complex hospital environment

Page 12: Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Patient Hand-offs: A Medical Education Perspective Ingrid Philibert, PhD, MBA, Sr. VP, Field Activities,

Competencies Taught/Assessed and Modes of Assessment (recommended assessments are shown in bold)

Patient Care

Medical Knowledge

IP & Comm. Skills

Profession-alism

PBLI SBP

Educational Lecture / Web Tutorial with Post-Test

Interns X X X X

Handoff Video with Formal Debriefing and Self-assessment

Interns X X X

Use of "iSoBAR" Handoff Checklist with Formative Feedback

Interns X X X X

Personalized Handoff Instruction and Formative Feedback from Senior Residents or Faculty

Interns X X X X X X

Handoff OSHE with Debriefing and Formative Feedback

Interns X X X X X X

Direct Supervision and Formative Feedback on Handoffs by Senior Resident or Faculty (until the hand-off is delegated as Entrustable Professional Activity)

Interns X X X X X X

Page 13: Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Patient Hand-offs: A Medical Education Perspective Ingrid Philibert, PhD, MBA, Sr. VP, Field Activities,

Competencies Taught/Assessed and Modes of Assessment (recommended assessments are shown in bold)

Patient Care

Medical Knowledge

IP & Comm. Skills

Profession-alism

PBLI SBP

Resident-Led Morning Report with Feedback

Junior/ Senior

Residents

X X X X

Train the Trainer Session for Supervising Intern Hand-offs

Jr/Sr Residents

X X X X

Quality audits and feedback of written or computerized hand-off notes(with Feedback),

Jr/Sr Residents,

Faculty

X X

Adapt Handoff tools and forms to local setting using process

Jr/Sr Residents,

Faculty

X X X X X X

Develop local formative and summative evaluation tools, potentially using existing models

Jr/Sr Residents,

Faculty

X X X X X X