繁忙的急救中心的交接过程:来自南非约翰内斯堡的院前视角

A. Makkink, Christopher Stein, S. Bruijns
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引用次数: 2

摘要

急救中心交接通常发生在院前急救人员和接受交接的急救中心人员之间。不有效的交接可能会给患者安全带来风险。一个可能影响交接的因素是在繁忙的急救中心内交接的过程。方法本研究报告的资料构成序贯解释混合方法研究的定性成分。它采用面对面、半结构化的访谈来收集数据。对南非各种资格和范围的院前急救人员进行了15次访谈。采访被逐字抄录并输入Atlas。Ti®编码和分析使用定性描述的方法。结果院前急救参与者认为,缺乏急救中心工作人员接受交接是有效交接的障碍,并将其归因于急救中心超负荷工作和人手不足。这可能会中断切换,并且必须为同一患者进行多次切换。院前急救参与者表示更倾向于直接交给医生。结论发现了影响急诊中心有效交接的几个潜在流程障碍,包括缺乏人员接受交接、中断以及需要对同一患者进行多次交接。一般来说,这些障碍是由于急救中心人手不足、工作过度而造成的。我们鼓励未来对急救中心移交进行研究,特别是从接受移交的人员的角度进行研究。
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The Process of Handover in the Busy Emergency Centre: A Pre-Hospital Perspective from Johannesburg, South Africa
Background Emergency centre handover usually takes place between the pre-hospital emergency care personnel who deliver the handover and the emergency centre personnel who receive the handover. Handover that is not effective may present risks to patient safety. One factor that may affect handover delivery is the process of handover within a busy emergency centre. Methods The data reported on in this study formed the qualitative component of a sequential explanatory mixed methods study. It used face-to-face, semi-structured interviews to gather data. Fifteen interviews were conducted with pre-hospital emergency care personnel from a range of qualification and scopes in South Africa. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and imported into Atlas.ti® for coding and analysis using a qualitative descriptive methodology. Results Pre-hospital emergency care participants identified a lack of emergency centre staff available to receive handover as a barrier to effective handover and attributed this to emergency centres being overworked and understaffed. This potentiated interruptions to handover and having to deliver multiple handovers for the same patient. Pre-hospital emergency care participants indicated a preference for handing over directly to a doctor. Conclusion Several potential process barriers to effective emergency centre handover were identified, including lack of personnel to receive handover, interruptions and the need to perform multiple handovers for the same patient. Generally, these barriers were attributed to the busy understaffed and overworked nature of emergency centres. We would encourage future research in emergency centre handover, specifically from the perspective of the personnel who receive handovers.
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