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    Newswise  Bethesda - Improvements in verbal and written    communication between health care providers during patient    hand-offs can reduce injuries due to medical errors.  
    Reported in the Nov. 6, 2014, New England Journal of    Medicine, researchers at Walter Reed National Military    Medical Center (WRNMMC) and the Uniformed Services University    of Health Sciences (USU) recognized this critical safety    concern and teamed up with nine civilian hospitals to develop    I-PASS, an original system of bundled communication and    team-training tools for hand-off of patient care between    providers. The study revealed a remarkable 30% reduction in    injuries due to medical errors after its implementation across    all 9 institutions.  
    According to the Joint Commission (a non-profit organization    that accredits and certifies more than 20,500 health care    organizations and programs in the United States and whose    accreditation and certification is recognized nationwide as a    symbol of quality that reflects an organizations commitment to    meeting certain performance standards), ineffective hand-off    communication is recognized as a critical patient safety    problem in health care; in fact, an estimated 80% of serious    medical errors involve miscommunication between caregivers    during the transfer of patients. The hand-off process involves    givers, those caregivers transmitting patient information and    transitioning the care of a patient to the next clinician, and    receivers, those care-givers who accept the patient    information and care of that patient. In addition to causing    patient harm, defective hand-offs can lead to delays in    treatment, inappropriate treatment, and increased length of    stay in the hospital.  
    As the first military hospital to adopt the I-PASS hand-off    bundle, which includes training in team communication skills, a    verbal hand-off process organized around the verbal mnemonic    I-PASS (Illness severity, Patient summary, Action List,    Situational awareness and contingency planning, and Synthesis    by receiver), a written or computerized hand-off tool that    reflects the verbal mnemonic, a faculty development and    observation program, and an institutional dissemination    campaign, Walter Reed Bethesda has now implemented I-PASS for    use across multiple disciplines to create an institutional    transition of care policy.  
    According to one of the lead investigators COL Clifton E. Yu,    Chief, Graduate Medical Education at Walter Reed Bethesda, Not    only is Walter Reed National Military Medical Center the only    military hospital to be involved in the study, but we are also    the only study site that was not a major childrens hospital.    Taking advantage of that fact, we decided to work towards    adapting the curriculum for dissemination across multiple    clinical areas, to include adult medicine, surgery, and nursing    environments. As our successful institutional roll out is    evolving, we are setting the national standard and precedent    for the use of I-PASS in all clinical and nursing domains where    transitions of patient care typically occur.  
    Training in team communication skills is a critical element of    the I-PASS Hand-off Bundle and, given the DoD Patient Safety    Programs longstanding interest and expertise in this area    through their initial development of the TeamSTEPPS program    (Team Strategies and Tools to Enhance Performance and Patient    Safety, now jointly sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare    Research and Quality), it seemed a natural fit to have WRNMMC    and USU investigators take the lead on developing this aspect    of the I-PASS curriculum. After completing training as a    TeamSTEPPS Master Trainer, I was able to leverage my new    knowledge and skills in order to adopt key elements of    TeamSTEPPS into the team communication skills training for    I-PASS. As it happens, our inclusion of TeamSTEPPS components    into I-PASS dovetails perfectly with WRNMMCs current roll out    of full TeamSTEPPS training hospital wide, said Army Maj.    (Dr.) Jennifer Hepps, assistant professor of Pediatrics at USU.  
    We were able to use the expertise of USUs Val G. Hemming    Simulation Center to create roleplays and videos simulating    handover scenarios. These simulations helped to teach faculty    and residents the best practices in transitions of care between    patient teams, said Joseph Lopreiato, M.D., MPH, professor of    Pediatrics and associate dean of Simulation at USU. Thanks to    the support from the USU administration, our Simulation Center    was able to contribute to this groundbreaking research that    will go a long way toward reducing medical errors in the    transitions of patient care.  
    Patients are at the center of everything we do," said Brig.    Gen. Jeffrey B. Clark, director of the Walter Reed National    Military Medical Center. "By quickly adopting the IPASS    transitions of care principles for all healthcare teams, we    simultaneously bring state of the art healthcare to our    patients and teach the next generation of healthcare team    members what right looks like.  
Read more from the original source:
I-PASS Reduces Medical Error Injuries During Patient Handoff by 30%