Handover is the physical and professional transition of care from one provider to the next. The handover of the pre-hospital critical care patient carries significant potential risk. Misunderstanding or misinterpretation of information can have significant adverse impact on patient outcome. Although empirical evidence is scarce in this area, in-hospital reported medical error associated with handover has been reported to be almost 34%,9 and in England, during 2010-12, handover was explicitly established as the main contributor in 5% of patient safety related deaths.10 The pre-hospital hospital transition carries additional potential hazards due to the time critical nature and the multiple human factors involved.
This module will aim to:
The WHO (2007)9 suggested an effective handover is a structured, standardised, focused brief that avoids repetition or interruption and allows time for questions or read-back. Solet et al, 2007 advocated that handovers should be precise, unambiguous and face-to-face.
There are numerous examples of handover tools with the most common in the United Kingdom including AT-MIST and AMPLE which provide a structure to handover. However, to have an effective handover there are additional team resource management skills that need to be utilised to create a shared mental model.
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