Team Training for Success: An Interprofessional Curriculum for the Resuscitation of Emergency and Critical Patients

Abstract Introduction Team training initiatives, a form of interprofessional education, have been implemented in hospitals nationwide in response to patient safety reports citing teamwork and communication failures among the most frequent contributors to errors. In the emergency department and criti...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ambrose Wong, Maureen Gang, Lisa Wing, Grace Ng, Demian Szyld, Heather Mahoney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association of American Medical Colleges 2014-05-01
Series:MedEdPORTAL
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mededportal.org/doi/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.9807
_version_ 1818942506480435200
author Ambrose Wong
Maureen Gang
Lisa Wing
Grace Ng
Demian Szyld
Heather Mahoney
author_facet Ambrose Wong
Maureen Gang
Lisa Wing
Grace Ng
Demian Szyld
Heather Mahoney
author_sort Ambrose Wong
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Introduction Team training initiatives, a form of interprofessional education, have been implemented in hospitals nationwide in response to patient safety reports citing teamwork and communication failures among the most frequent contributors to errors. In the emergency department and critical care units, efficient resuscitation of acute patients is contingent upon skilled resuscitation teams employing effective teamwork and communication skills to provide reliable and safe care. Policymakers and leaders in health care recognize that interprofessional collaboration in the workplace is required to achieve efficient, coordinated, and high quality healthcare. This team-training curriculum was established and implemented in order to address this specific need. Methods This educational module has been created and implemented to bring together an interprofessional team consisting of emergency medicine or internal medicine residents and nurses to work together as a cohesive unit during the resuscitation of critical patients. The materials presented and the simulation scenarios provided highlight and teach role identification as well as effective communication and teamwork. Results Over seven sessions from July to September 2012, a total of 76 nurses and residents participated in the course in our department. We showed a significant improvement in teamwork attitudes as measured by the Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality's previously validated TeamSTEPPS™ Teamwork Attitudes Questionnaire. Discussion Due to the overwhelmingly positive response from the course participants, several other departments within our institution have started to create and implement a similar simulation-based course for team training in their departments as well.
first_indexed 2024-12-20T07:12:31Z
format Article
id doaj.art-7d0e7d9e2b81424fa18267a9870da69b
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2374-8265
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-20T07:12:31Z
publishDate 2014-05-01
publisher Association of American Medical Colleges
record_format Article
series MedEdPORTAL
spelling doaj.art-7d0e7d9e2b81424fa18267a9870da69b2022-12-21T19:48:52ZengAssociation of American Medical CollegesMedEdPORTAL2374-82652014-05-011010.15766/mep_2374-8265.9807Team Training for Success: An Interprofessional Curriculum for the Resuscitation of Emergency and Critical PatientsAmbrose Wong0Maureen Gang1Lisa Wing2Grace Ng3Demian Szyld4Heather Mahoney51 New York University School of Medicine2 New York University School of Medicine3 Bellevue Hospital Center4 New York University School of Medicine5 New York University School of Medicine6 University of California, San Francisco, School of MedicineAbstract Introduction Team training initiatives, a form of interprofessional education, have been implemented in hospitals nationwide in response to patient safety reports citing teamwork and communication failures among the most frequent contributors to errors. In the emergency department and critical care units, efficient resuscitation of acute patients is contingent upon skilled resuscitation teams employing effective teamwork and communication skills to provide reliable and safe care. Policymakers and leaders in health care recognize that interprofessional collaboration in the workplace is required to achieve efficient, coordinated, and high quality healthcare. This team-training curriculum was established and implemented in order to address this specific need. Methods This educational module has been created and implemented to bring together an interprofessional team consisting of emergency medicine or internal medicine residents and nurses to work together as a cohesive unit during the resuscitation of critical patients. The materials presented and the simulation scenarios provided highlight and teach role identification as well as effective communication and teamwork. Results Over seven sessions from July to September 2012, a total of 76 nurses and residents participated in the course in our department. We showed a significant improvement in teamwork attitudes as measured by the Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality's previously validated TeamSTEPPS™ Teamwork Attitudes Questionnaire. Discussion Due to the overwhelmingly positive response from the course participants, several other departments within our institution have started to create and implement a similar simulation-based course for team training in their departments as well.http://www.mededportal.org/doi/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.9807Interprofessional EducationEducationTeam TrainingPatient SimulationPatient SafetyEmergency Service
spellingShingle Ambrose Wong
Maureen Gang
Lisa Wing
Grace Ng
Demian Szyld
Heather Mahoney
Team Training for Success: An Interprofessional Curriculum for the Resuscitation of Emergency and Critical Patients
MedEdPORTAL
Interprofessional Education
Education
Team Training
Patient Simulation
Patient Safety
Emergency Service
title Team Training for Success: An Interprofessional Curriculum for the Resuscitation of Emergency and Critical Patients
title_full Team Training for Success: An Interprofessional Curriculum for the Resuscitation of Emergency and Critical Patients
title_fullStr Team Training for Success: An Interprofessional Curriculum for the Resuscitation of Emergency and Critical Patients
title_full_unstemmed Team Training for Success: An Interprofessional Curriculum for the Resuscitation of Emergency and Critical Patients
title_short Team Training for Success: An Interprofessional Curriculum for the Resuscitation of Emergency and Critical Patients
title_sort team training for success an interprofessional curriculum for the resuscitation of emergency and critical patients
topic Interprofessional Education
Education
Team Training
Patient Simulation
Patient Safety
Emergency Service
url http://www.mededportal.org/doi/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.9807
work_keys_str_mv AT ambrosewong teamtrainingforsuccessaninterprofessionalcurriculumfortheresuscitationofemergencyandcriticalpatients
AT maureengang teamtrainingforsuccessaninterprofessionalcurriculumfortheresuscitationofemergencyandcriticalpatients
AT lisawing teamtrainingforsuccessaninterprofessionalcurriculumfortheresuscitationofemergencyandcriticalpatients
AT graceng teamtrainingforsuccessaninterprofessionalcurriculumfortheresuscitationofemergencyandcriticalpatients
AT demianszyld teamtrainingforsuccessaninterprofessionalcurriculumfortheresuscitationofemergencyandcriticalpatients
AT heathermahoney teamtrainingforsuccessaninterprofessionalcurriculumfortheresuscitationofemergencyandcriticalpatients