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The key characteristics of effective health care teams, including the ability to rehearse procedures together, stable membership, effective two-way communication, and the ability to achieve good results without strong communication. It highlights the immediate results of building an effective health care team, such as more effective handoffs and safer care. The document also emphasizes the importance of improving team effectiveness to reduce the risk of errors and provide a 'safety net' for individual caregivers. It covers topics like the role of team members, effective team leadership, structured communication techniques like sbar, and the consequences of ineffective patient handoffs. Valuable insights into the critical factors that contribute to the success of health care teams and the importance of fostering a collaborative and communicative work environment to deliver high-quality patient care.
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Effective health care teams have several important characteristics, including: a) The ability to rehearse procedures together, like a choir or a sports team. b) Stable membership; that is, they have the same people on the team from day-to-day. c) Effective two-way communication (effective communication techniques) d) The ability to achieve good results without strong communication. โโc) Effective two-way communication (effective communication techniques) Which of the following is likely to be the most immediate result of building an effective health care team? (not my IHI) a) Less costly health care b) More effective handoffs c) Fewer delays in care d) Elimination of waste in the system โโb) More effective handoffs Which of the following is likely to be the most immediate result of building an effective health care team?
a) Less costly health care b) Safer care c) Fewer delays in care d) Elimination of waste in the system โโb) safer care As a nurse practitioner in a small, rural urgent care clinic, you believe that your clinic team works well together. Which of the following facts would best support your belief? a) Not a single complaint about unprofessional behavior has been filed by clinic members over the past year. b) The providers work in rotating shifts and rarely need to transmit information from one shift to the next. c) The team routinely takes a moment to discuss the plan and voice concerns before doing a procedure. d) All of the above. โโc) The team routinely takes a moment to discuss the plan and voice concerns before doing a procedure One reason it's critical for caregivers to improve their teams' effectiveness is: a) Effective teams reduce the risk of errors by providing a "safety net" for individual caregivers.
(A) Have multiple degrees. (B) Are usually physicians. (C) Seek input from all members of the team. (D) Know the correct answer in any given situation. โโc) Seek input from all members of the team
After you speak up, which of the following responses by the pharmacist would best indicate that this pharmacy has a culture of safety? (A) "Thanks! I'll tell your supervisor that you helped me today." (B) "If you know what's good for you, you won't tell anyone about this." (C) "Thanks! But in the future, please correct me in private, when others aren't around." (D) "Thanks! I appreciate that. But don't ever say something like that to the other pharmacist here. He's got quite a temper." โโ(A) "Thanks! I'll tell your supervisor that you helped me today." What is a culture of safety? (A) A place where errors never happen (B) A place where errors are always caught (C) A place where all staff can talk freely about safety problems without fear (D) A place where all staff feel comfortable reporting errors only if they're guaranteed anonymity โโC) A place where all staff can talk freely about safety problems without fear
You are a member of an intensive care unit team in a regional hospital. This morning, a patient had an unexpected severe allergic reaction (anaphylaxis) after being given a penicillin derivative. There was a significant delay in getting the physician involved and beginning treatment for this life-threatening condition. Fortunately, the patient is now stable and does not seem to be experiencing any lasting effects. The unit leaders are trying to figure out what changes they should make to prevent this treatment delay from happening again. Given what you know about the incident, what change would you recommend? (A) Implement mandatory debriefings after the team works together on a patient. (B) Fire the physician who failed to respond in a timely way. (C) Stop using nursing assistants in the ICU. (D) Implement the use of critical language in the ICU. โโ(D) Implement the use of critical language in the ICU.
On the unit where you work, nurses "sign out" at the end of a shift by tape recording their change of shift reports. The nurses who are starting their shifts then listen to the reports after the other nurses have left. (Not on my IHI) Which of the following is a possible negative consequence of this type of patient handoff? a) Information may be confusing because it is transmitted verbally. b) Information may be miscommunicated because there is no opportunity to ask questions. c) Information may be miscommunicated because the nurse who records the report does not use a checklist. d) There is no possible negative consequence; this is an excellent handoff technique. โโb) Information may be miscommunicated because there is no opportunity to ask questions When you arrived at the unit today and listened to the change of shift report, you heard about a patient named Jane W. According to the tape-recorded signout, Jane "is a 57-year-old woman with abdominal pain and vomiting. She has pain medications ordered p.r.n. [as needed]." During your shift, Jane does not request pain medications. Near the end of your shift, however, you get a call from Jane's daughter. Distraught, she asks why nobody is treating her mother's pain. When you explain that Jane has not requested any pain medications, her daughter exclaims, "But she's had a stroke! She can't use the call light! What kind of place are you running over there?"
b) Between a doctor and a nurse c) Between two health care organizations d) All of the above โโd) All of the above Which of the following actions is essential for closed-loop communication? (not on my IHI) a) The sender gives a great deal of detailed information to the receiver, making sure not to leave anything out. b) The receiver responds to all information, even if it is only with an "okay" or "uh-huh," to acknowledge that he has heard the sender. c) The receiver repeats to the sender what he has heard. d) None of the above is essential. โโc) The receiver repeats to the sender what he has heard. On a particular busy night in the emergency department, a patient comes in with chest pain. The triage nurse, who has been on the job only two days, follows protocol and brings the patient in immediately. An electrocardiogram is done within five minutes and shows a possible heart attack. The cardiologist is called immediately, and 25 minutes after arriving in the emergency department, the patient is in the cardiac catheterization lab.
The efficient care in this case is an example of: (not on my IHI) a) Commitment to quality by a fabulous triage nurse. b) The excellence that's only possible at an academic medical center. c) The benefits of having a clear plan for emergencies. d) The need to publically report patient outcomes. โโc) The benefits of having a clear plan for emergencies. On a particularly busy night in the emergency department, a patient comes in with chest pain. The triage nurse, who's been on the job only two days, takes the patient's information, fills out the form, and puts the patient's chart on the rack so he'll be seen in the order in which he arrived. She mentions to a passing nurse, "There's a patient here who has pain - he's waiting to be seen." Thirty minutes later, still waiting to be seen, the patient collapses in the waiting room. What likely contributed to this outcome? a) The lack of a shared plan for patients with chest pain resulted in a failure to act quickly. b) The high patient volume caused a long delay in caring for a patient with a critical condition. c) A new nurse was placed in triage, which was not safe.
a) Must be initiated by the team leader. b) Includes SBAR, briefings, and debriefings. c) Is more important for nurses than for physicians. d) Includes email, text messaging, and debriefings. โโb) Includes SBAR, briefings, and debriefings. Which of the following is a likely result of effective planning? (Not on my IHI) a) The team will be able to accomplish its work with fewer people. b) Crucial patient information will be lost. c) There will be fewer lawsuits. d) The team will be more adaptable to change. โโd) The team will be more adaptable to change.