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Teams communicating through STEPPS

Authors :
Robert J. Adams
Christy J Pirone
Saravana Kumar
Tim Schultz
Karen Stead
Conrad A Wareham
Sue Tiver
Stead, Karen
Kumar, Saravana
Schultz, Timothy J
Tiver, Sue
Pirone, Christy J
Adams, Robert J
Wareham, Conrad A
Source :
ResearcherID, Scopus-Elsevier
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Australia : Australasian Medical Publishing Company, 2009.

Abstract

nor has it been introduced into a mental health care environment. We report here on a case study of the implementation of Team- STEPPS at an inpatient mental health facility in South Australia. We sought to determine whether the training intervention changed staff attitudes and behaviours and had an impact on patient care. Our aim was to evaluate the effectiveness of the intervention with measures developed to address three outcome constructs: observed team behav- iours; attitudes and opinions; and clinical performance and outcomes. 5 ABSTRACT Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of the implementation of a TeamSTEPPS (Team Strategies and Tools to Enhance Performance and Patient Safety) program at an Australian mental health facility. Design, setting and participants: TeamSTEPPS is an evidence-based teamwork training system developed in the United States. Five health care sites in South Australia implemented TeamSTEPPS using a train-the-trainer model over an 8-month intervention period commencing January 2008 and concluding September 2008. A team of senior clinical staff was formed at each site to drive the improvement process. Independent researchers used direct observation and questionnaire surveys to evaluate the effectiveness of the implementation in three outcome areas: observed team behaviours; staff attitudes and opinions; and clinical performance and outcome. The results reported here focus on one site, an inpatient mental health facility. Main outcome measures: Team knowledge, skills and attitudes; patient safety culture; incident reporting rates; seclusion rates; observation for the frequency of use of TeamSTEPPS tools. Results: Outcomes included restructuring of multidisciplinary meetings and the introduction of structured communication tools. The evaluation of patient safety culture and of staff knowledge, skills and attitudes (KSA) to teamwork and communication indicated a significant improvement in two dimensions of patient safety culture (frequency of event reporting, and organisational learning) and a 6.8% increase in the total KSA score. Clinical outcomes included reduced rates of seclusion. Conclusion: TeamSTEPPS implementation had a substantial impact on patient safety culture, teamwork and communication at an Australian mental health facility. It encouraged a culture of learning from patient safety incidents and making

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ResearcherID, Scopus-Elsevier
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1ae25c2d1eaa36ec2838a6e253216a32