Loading…

Acute general surgery in Canada: a survey of current handover practices

Background Today’s acute care surgery (ACS) service model requires multiple handovers to incoming attending surgeons and residents. Our objectives were to investigate current handover practices in Canadian hospitals that have an ACS service and assess the quality of handover practices in place. Meth...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Canadian Journal of Surgery 2013-06, Vol.56 (3), p.E24-E28
Main Authors: Johner, Amanda M., MD, MHSc, Merchant, Shaila, MD, MHSc, Aslani, Nava, MD, MHSc, Planting, Anneke, MD, MHSc, Ball, Chad G., MD, MSc, Widder, Sandy, MD, Pagliarello, Giuseppe, MD, Parry, Neil G., MD, Klassen, Dennis, MD, Hameed, S. Morad, MD, MPH
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Background Today’s acute care surgery (ACS) service model requires multiple handovers to incoming attending surgeons and residents. Our objectives were to investigate current handover practices in Canadian hospitals that have an ACS service and assess the quality of handover practices in place. Methods We administered an electronic survey among ACS residents in 6 Canadian general surgery programs. Results Resident handover of patient care occurs frequently and often not under ideal circumstances. Most residents spend less than 5 minutes preparing handovers. Clinical uncertainty owing to inadequate handover is most likely to occur during overnight and weekend coverage. Almost one-third of surveyed residents rate the overall quality of the handovers they received as poor. Conclusion Handover skills must be taught in a systematic fashion. Improved resident communication will likely decrease loss of patient information and therefore improve ACS patient safety.
ISSN:0008-428X
1488-2310
DOI:10.1503/cjs.035011