The impact of brief team communication, leadership and team behavior training on ad hoc team performance in trauma care settings

Communication breakdowns and care coordination problems often cause preventable adverse patient care events, which can be especially acute in the trauma setting, in which ad hoc teams have little time for advanced planning. Existing teamwork curricula do not address the particular issues associated...

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Published inThe American journal of surgery Vol. 207; no. 2; pp. 170 - 178
Main Authors Roberts, Nicole K., Williams, Reed G., Schwind, Cathy J., Sutyak, John A., McDowell, Christopher, Griffen, David, Wall, Jarrod, Sanfey, Hilary, Chestnut, Audra, Meier, Andreas H., Wohltmann, Christopher, Clark, Ted R., Wetter, Nathan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.02.2014
Elsevier Limited
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Summary:Communication breakdowns and care coordination problems often cause preventable adverse patient care events, which can be especially acute in the trauma setting, in which ad hoc teams have little time for advanced planning. Existing teamwork curricula do not address the particular issues associated with ad hoc emergency teams providing trauma care. Ad hoc trauma teams completed a preinstruction simulated trauma encounter and were provided with instruction on appropriate team behaviors and team communication. Teams completed a postinstruction simulated trauma encounter immediately afterward and 3 weeks later, then completed a questionnaire. Blinded raters rated videotapes of the simulations. Participants expressed high levels of satisfaction and intent to change practice after the intervention. Participants changed teamwork and communication behavior on the posttest, and changes were sustained after a 3-week interval, though there was some loss of retention. Brief training exercises can change teamwork and communication behaviors on ad hoc trauma teams.
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ISSN:0002-9610
1879-1883
1879-1883
DOI:10.1016/j.amjsurg.2013.06.016