Testing the effects of checklists on team behaviour during emergencies on general wards: An observational study using high-fidelity simulation
Authors
De Bie Dekker, A. J. R.Dijkmans, J. J.
Todorovac, N.
Hibbs, R.
Boe Krarup, K.
Bouwman, A. R.
Barach, P.
Fløjstrup, M.
Cooksley, Timothy J
Kellett, J.
Bindels, A.
Korsten, H. H. M.
Brabrand, M.
Subbe, C. P.
Affiliation
Department of Intensive Care Unit, Catharina Hospital Eindhoven, Eindhoven, The Netherlands.Issue Date
2020
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Introduction: Clinical teams struggle on general wards with acute management of deteriorating patients. We hypothesized that the Crisis Checklist App, a mobile application containing checklists tailored to crisis-management, can improve teamwork and acute care management. Methods: A before-and-after study was undertaken in high-fidelity simulation centres in the Netherlands, Denmark and United Kingdom. Clinical teams completed three scenarios with a deteriorating patient without checklists followed by three scenarios using the Crisis Checklist App. Teamwork performance as the primary outcome was assessed by the Mayo High Performance Teamwork scale. The secondary outcomes were the time required to complete all predefined safety-critical steps, percentage of omitted safety-critical steps, effects on other non-technical skills, and users' self-assessments. Linear mixed models and a non-parametric survival test were conducted to assess these outcomes. Results: 32 teams completed 188 scenarios. The Mayo High Performance Teamwork scale mean scores improved to 23.4 out of 32 (95% CI: 22.4-24.3) with the Crisis Checklist App compared to 21.4 (20.4-22.3) with local standard of care. The mean difference was 1.97 (1.34-2.6; p < 0.001). Teams that used the checklists were able to complete all safety-critical steps of a scenario in more simulations (40/95 vs 21/93 scenarios) and these steps were completed faster (stratified log-rank test ?2 = 8.0; p = 0.005). The self-assessments of the observers and users showed favourable effects after checklist usage for other non-technical skills including situational awareness, decision making, task management and communication. Conclusions: Implementation of a novel mobile crisis checklist application among clinical teams was associated in a simulated general ward setting with improved teamwork performance, and a higher and faster completion rate of predetermined safety-critical steps.Citation
De Bie Dekker AJR, Dijkmans JJ, Todorovac N, Hibbs R, Boe Krarup K, Bouwman AR, et al. Testing the effects of checklists on team behaviour during emergencies on general wards: An observational study using high-fidelity simulation. Resuscitation. 2020;157:3-12.Journal
ResuscitationDOI
10.1016/j.resuscitation.2020.09.031PubMed ID
33027620Additional Links
https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.resuscitation.2020.09.031Type
ArticleLanguage
enae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1016/j.resuscitation.2020.09.031
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