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Telemedicine for Interfacility Nurse Handoffs*

Authors :
Torryn L. Jennings-Hill
Parul Dayal
Jamie L. Mouzoon
Ilana S. Sigal
Jennifer L. Rosenthal
Hadley S Sauers-Ford
Heather Siefkes
Breanna N. Warnock
Jennifer M. Martinson
Genevieve Dizon
Monica K. Lieng
Sandie Dial
Cheryl L. McBeth
James P. Marcin
Emily A. Pons
Shelby T. Chen
Haley E. Dannewitz
Kiersten Kozycz
Nicole Vance
Julia K. Huerta
Source :
Pediatric critical care medicine : a journal of the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies, vol 20, iss 9
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2019.

Abstract

Objective To compare nurse preparedness and quality of patient handoff during interfacility transfers from a pretransfer emergency department to a PICU when conducted over telemedicine versus telephone. Design Cross-sectional nurse survey linked with patient electronic medical record data using multivariable, multilevel analysis. Setting Tertiary PICU within an academic children's hospital. Participants PICU nurses who received a patient handoff between October 2017 and July 2018. Interventions None. Main results and measurements Among 239 eligible transfers, 106 surveys were completed by 55 nurses (44% survey response rate). Telemedicine was used for 30 handoffs (28%), and telephone was used for 76 handoffs (72%). Patients were comparable with respect to age, sex, race, primary spoken language, and insurance, but handoffs conducted over telemedicine involved patients with higher illness severity as measured by the Pediatric Risk of Mortality III score (4.4 vs 1.9; p = 0.05). After adjusting for Pediatric Risk of Mortality III score, survey recall time, and residual clustering by nurse, receiving nurses reported higher preparedness (measured on a five-point adjectival scale) following telemedicine handoffs compared with telephone handoffs (3.4 vs 3.1; p = 0.02). There were no statistically significant differences in both bivariable and multivariable analyses of handoff quality as measured by the Handoff Clinical Evaluation Exercise. Handoffs using telemedicine were associated with increased number of Illness severity, Patient summary, Action list, Situation awareness and contingency planning, Synthesis by receiver components (3.3 vs 2.8; p = 0.04), but this difference was not significant in the adjusted analysis (3.1 vs 2.9; p = 0.55). Conclusions Telemedicine is feasible for nurse-to-nurse handoffs of critically ill patients between pretransfer and receiving facilities and may be associated with increased perceived and objective nurse preparedness upon patient arrival. Additional research is needed to demonstrate that telemedicine during nurse handoffs improves communication, decreases preventable adverse events, and impacts family and provider satisfaction.

Details

ISSN :
15297535
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cd0fea05e20aa475ff2e6961f11362ee