• Pediatric emergency care · Apr 2022

    Improving Verbal Handoff for Patients Admitted From the Pediatric Emergency Department to Medical Inpatient Services: A Trainee-Led Quality Improvement Intervention.

    • Elise Gross, Carissa Bunke, and Natalie Schellpfeffer.
    • From the Departments of Pediatrics.
    • Pediatr Emerg Care. 2022 Apr 1; 38 (4): e1229e1232e1229-e1232.

    ObjectiveTransitions of care are a well-identified source of adverse events. At our academic tertiary children's hospital, no standardized verbal handoff is used in the emergency department with a lack of education provided to clinicians on handoff. We aimed to increase the percent of handoffs from the pediatric emergency department to inpatient medical services including 7 critical elements and increase clinician score of individual handoffs and overall clinician satisfaction with handoff key components.MethodsStudy occurred from Fall 2017 through Winter 2019. After collecting baseline data, a modified I-PASS tool was visually integrated into work areas. Tool education was performed by brief lecture, with iterative education occurring cyclically. Handoff assessment and clinician satisfaction surveys were then recollected. Outcome measures included clinician scores of individual handoffs and overall satisfaction with handoff. Process measure was percent handoffs including 7 critical elements. Balancing measure was handoff length in minutes.ResultsClinician satisfaction scores improved from baseline (response rate, 38%) to postintervention (response rate, 30%) in efficiency (57%-69%), detail (57%-66%), and safety (55%-64%). Clinician scores of individual handoffs improved from 66% rating very good or excellent at baseline to 77% postintervention. Handoff time did not increase. Percent handoffs with all 7 critical elements did not show improvement.ConclusionsTrainee-led implementation of handoff standardization increased clinician satisfaction and clinician score of individual handoffs without compromising handoff length. Although feasibility can be a challenge, trainee-led quality improvement is meaningful and should be promoted and valued in graduate medical education, despite limitations.Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

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