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Developing an Emergency Medicine Handoff Tool: an Electronic Delphi Approach

Overview
Journal Int J Emerg Med
Publisher Biomed Central
Specialty Emergency Medicine
Date 2019 Nov 23
PMID 31752660
Citations 2
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Background: Handoffs at the end of clinical shifts occur with high frequencies in the emergency department setting and they pose an increased risk to patients. There is a need to standardize handoff practices. This study aimed to use an electronic Delphi method to identify the core elements essential for an emergency department physician to physician handoff and propose a framework for implementation.

Methods: An electronic Delphi-style study with a national panel of board-certified emergency physicians in Saudi Arabia. The panel was conducted over four rounds. The first to identify elements relevant to the end of shift handoff and categorize them into domains, while the remaining three to score and debate individual elements.

Results: Twenty-five board-certified emergency physicians from various cities and practice settings were enrolled. All panelists completed the entire Delphi process. Thirty-two elements were identified and classified into 4 domains. The top five rated handoff elements were patient identification, chief complaint history, clinical stability, working diagnosis, and consulting services involved. Panel scores showed convergence as rounds progressed and the final list of elements had a high-reliability score (Cronbach's alpha 0.93).

Conclusions: This study yielded an itemized and ranked list of elements that are easy to implement and could be used to standardize patient handoffs by emergency physicians. While this study was conducted on an emergency medicine panel, the methods used may be adapted to develop standardized handoff frameworks that serve different disciplines or practice settings.

Citing Articles

Psychometric Analysis of the Spanish-Language Version of the Instrument for the Evaluation of Handovers in Critically Ill Patients in Urgent and Emergency Care Settings.

Tortosa-Alted R, Reverte-Villarroya S, Berenguer-Poblet M, Valls-Fonayet F, Fernandez-Saez J, Martinez-Segura E J Clin Med. 2024; 13(13).

PMID: 38999367 PMC: 11242383. DOI: 10.3390/jcm13133802.


Handover of Critical Patients in Urgent Care and Emergency Settings: A Systematic Review of Validated Assessment Tools.

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PMID: 34945032 PMC: 8707112. DOI: 10.3390/jcm10245736.

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