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Variation in printed handoff documents: Results and recommendations from a multicenter needs assessment
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Variation in printed handoff documents: Results and recommendations from a multicenter needs assessment

Glenn Rosenbluth, James F Bale, Amy J Starmer, Nancy D Spector, Rajendu Srivastava, Daniel C West, Theodore C Sectish, Christopher P Landrigan, I-PASS Study Education Executive Committee and Sharon Calaman
Journal of hospital medicine, v 10(8), pp 517-524
Aug 2015
PMID: 26014471

Abstract

Canada Child Communication Female Health Planning Guidelines Hospitalists - standards Hospitals, Pediatric - standards Humans Male Medical Errors - prevention & control Needs Assessment - standards Patient Handoff - standards United States
Handoffs of patient care are a leading root cause of medical errors. Standardized techniques exist to minimize miscommunications during verbal handoffs, but studies to guide standardization of printed handoff documents are lacking. To determine whether variability exists in the content of printed handoff documents and to identify key data elements that should be uniformly included in these documents. Pediatric hospitalist services at 9 institutions in the United States and Canada. Sample handoff documents from each institution were reviewed, and structured group interviews were conducted to understand each institution's priorities for written handoffs. An expert panel reviewed all handoff documents and structured group-interview findings, and subsequently made consensus-based recommendations for data elements that were either essential or recommended, including best overall printed handoff practices. Nine sites completed structured group interviews and submitted data. We identified substantial variation in both the structure and content of printed handoff documents. Only 4 of 23 possible data elements (17%) were uniformly present in all sites' handoff documents. The expert panel recommended the following as essential for all printed handoffs: assessment of illness severity, patient summary, action items, situation awareness and contingency plans, allergies, medications, age, weight, date of admission, and patient and hospital service identifiers. Code status and several other elements were also recommended. Wide variation exists in the content of printed handoff documents. Standardizing printed handoff documents has the potential to decrease omissions of key data during patient care transitions, which may decrease the risk of downstream medical errors.

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14 citations in Scopus

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This publication has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#4 Quality Education
#3 Good Health and Well-Being

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Web of Science research areas
Medicine, General & Internal
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