hanys teamwork – technique: achieving critical care excellence

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HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence Teambuilding for Critical Care Teams

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Page 1: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

HANYS

Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

HANYS

Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Teambuilding for Critical Care TeamsTeambuilding for Critical Care Teams

Page 2: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

ObjectivesObjectives• Use four leadership strategies to structure

the organization to permanently support and enable effective teamwork among caregivers

• State the benefits of effective teamwork among critical care teams;

• Use five key action steps to create and maintain great teamwork;

• Understand how to hardwire teamwork behaviors into daily operations;

Page 3: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

The 4 P’sThe 4 P’s• Philosophy

• Policy

• Procedure

• Practice

Four leadership strategies to structure the organization to permanently support

and enable effective teamwork among caregivers

Page 4: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Understand that Great Teamwork (as a Key Component of Safety and Quality) in Critical Care

is a Function of Philosophy, Policy, Procedure, and Practice

Page 5: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

PhilosophyPhilosophy

An over-arching view of how the business of the hospital

will be conducted

Page 6: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Sample Philosophy Statements

• “General Hospital provides care that is safe, efficient, patient-centered, timely, effective, and equitable. To do this, we will excel technically, be experts in teamwork, and follow our policies, procedures, and protocols to provide the highest standard of care.”

• “Memorial Hospital provides safe, efficient, compassionate care of the highest standard through teamwork, technical proficiency, and adhering to guidelines, policies, and procedures.”

• Notice that each statement has two parts: “What” and “How”

Page 7: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

PolicyPolicy

Broad specifications of the manner in which management

expects things to be done

Page 8: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

“All members of the surgical services team at Vanderbilt will be trained in CRM skills and are expected to use these CRM skills in their daily work and in their professional communication with other members of the Vanderbilt healthcare organization.”

Vanderbilt University OR Guidelines

Sample Policy StatementSample Policy Statement

Page 9: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

“All on-duty members of the NICU team at General Hospital are expected to attend and participate in the Morning Shift Briefing. The Briefing shall be conducted using the approved briefing guide.”

General Hospital NICU Guidelines

Sample Policy StatementSample Policy Statement

Page 10: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

ProceduresProcedures

An established or correct way of doing something

Page 11: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Sample ProcedureSample

Procedure

Page 12: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

What the human operator actual does in the daily work environment

PracticesPractices

Page 13: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

PracticesPractices• Encompass every activity conducted in the

hospital:

• Correct execution of a procedure• Deviation from a procedure• Omission of a procedure• The use of a technique (authorized or not)

The human operator’s decisions and actions determine the system outcome

Page 14: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

• Conforming To, or Deviating From

• Cannot assume that teams will follow any given procedure dictated by management

–Must be checked or measured through “rounding” or data collection/analysis

PracticesPractices

Page 15: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

PracticesPractices

Team

Deviate

Deviate

Conform

Practices

Page 16: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

• Goal of Leadership/Management– Minimize deviations in Practices by…

• Promoting good practices by specifying coherent procedures

• Ensuring Procedures are consistent with Policy

• Ensuring Policy is consistent with Philosophy

PracticesPractices

Page 17: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

• Leadership Actions to Minimize Deviations

• Rounding (Checking)• Project Interviews• Reinforcing and Publicizing Positive Behavior• Dealing With Low Performers• Measuring

PracticesPractices

Page 18: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Creating the “Chemistry” Needed for Great Teamwork

Page 19: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

• Study of 23 NBA teams from 1980 – 1994

• Results? Greater roster stability (fewer trades and player turnover) = better won/loss record (Berman et al, 2002)

Basketball is a “Chemistry Sport”

Page 20: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Commercial Aviation is a “Chemistry Sport”

• Risk Factors • First day

• First flight

• Night time

• Visual approach flown by Captain

Page 21: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

VideoVideo

Does this team have the “Chemistry” for a safe flight?

Page 22: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Is Healthcare a “Chemistry Sport?”

• Harvard study of 38,577 procedures by 203 surgeons in 43 hospitals• Compared outcomes at facilities where

surgeons do a lot of procedures vs. where they do fewer

• Surgical skill is “not portable”• Better pt. outcomes where surgeons

have more experience with their teams• “Familiarity helps the surgeon perform

better.” (Huckman & Pisano, 2006)

Page 23: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

The Value of Creating “Chemistry”

• Creating and tapping the “Collective Mind” to detect & correct potential errors• Relevant information• Mastery of tools and knowledge• Understanding of tasks (Liang et al, 1995)

• Better Care • Better teams have 12% fewer avoidable

complications and 21% fewer avoidable deaths (Gallop, 2006)

Page 24: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

How can you build team

chemistry in a reliable and

repeatable way?

How can you build team

chemistry in a reliable and

repeatable way?

Page 25: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Building Team ChemistryBuilding Team Chemistry• Use inter-personal skills

• Introduce yourself

• Make eye contact when communicating

• Learn names so they can be used during the procedure or critical times during the shift

Page 26: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Building Team ChemistryBuilding Team Chemistry• Clearly provide / understand the

big picture in a “Pre-Brief”• Outline the procedure / situation

• Discuss critical points

• Specify duties

• Anticipated outcome

• Plan / discuss most likely contingencies

Page 27: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Building Team ChemistryBuilding Team Chemistry• Invite participation from the

Team• Explicitly ask team members to

provide information, express their concerns, and speak up when necessary

• Encourage the team to ask questions to verify their understanding

Page 28: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Building Team ChemistryBuilding Team Chemistry

• Ask questions to check understanding and begin two-way communication

• Set up a “pattern of response”

• Ask questions that require more than a “Yes” or “No” response

Page 29: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Building Team ChemistryBuilding Team Chemistry

• Acknowledge all communication

• Close the “loop”

• Confirms understanding

Page 30: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Using these skills “at the bedside”• Implement an Expanded Briefing conducted

with a Checklist• Why?

• Better performance and care

• Kaiser Permanente reported 50% cut in unexpected delays, RN turnover from 19% to zero, elimination of wrong surgeries

(Defontes, 2004)

• “…useful quality improvement tool…” (Altpeter et al, 2007)

• “…effective tool in promoting teamwork among surgery staff members…”

(Makary et al, 2007)

Page 31: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Model Briefing Format Offered by JACS

Names & roles of team members

Conduct Time Out procedures

Antibiotics

Review of critical steps

Review potential problems

Safety Statement*

Names & roles of team members

Conduct Time Out procedures

Antibiotics

Review of critical steps

Review potential problems

Safety Statement*

(Markary et al, 2007)

Page 32: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Evaluate this team…Evaluate this team…

Page 33: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Evaluate this team• Used interpersonal skills?

• Eye contact, body language, names, etc.

• Provided Big Picture – contingencies etc?

• Invited participation?• Asked open ended questions?• Acknowledged communications?

Page 34: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Action ListAction List• Determine your philosophy of care – get it in

writing• Revise your P&P Manual or Department

Policies to support the teamwork behavior you desire

• Ensure your care givers are trained in the desired teamwork skills

• Create “hardwired tools” to require and support the use of those teambuilding behaviors

• Build a system of “rounding” to check and reinforce the desired behaviors

Page 35: HANYS Teamwork – Technique: Achieving Critical Care Excellence

Thank Youwww.SaferPatients.com