Putting It All Together: Quality Control in Trauma Team Training


Decision making

Leadership, mutual support

Assertiveness

Leadership, attitudes

Mission analysis

Situation monitoring, attitudes

Communication

Communication

Leadership

Leadership

Adaptability/flexibility

Attitudes

Situational awareness

Situation monitoring



A variation on CRM, Trauma Crew Resource Management (TCRM), evolved from the UK Ministry of Defense aviation training CRM programs of the 1980s and emphasized communication and teamwork to increase safety of military air operations. TCRM was initially adopted by anesthesia teams in immersion-type simulation training, utilizing fast-moving scenarios, debriefing, and analysis of team performance. CRM courses have now been adapted to trauma and critical care teams and teach essential skills such as adaptability; task prioritization; shared situational awareness; workload distribution; team communication before and after patient arrival; mobilization of resources in the trauma bay, operating room (OR), intensive care unit (ICU), and diagnostics; performance monitoring and cross-checking of data; command, communication, and feedback coordination; leadership and management of team member followership; willingness to challenge each other; and conflict resolution skills [11]. With training, processes become planned and standardized, and each member knows not only his or her own responsibilities but also those of his teammates and can anticipate actions due to repetition and practice.

TeamSTEPPS evolved from the Joint Commission’s 2008 National Patient Safety Goal 16: improve recognition and response to changes in a patient’s condition. It was developed by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) for training teamwork tools and strategies to healthcare professionals (available at http://​teamstepps.​ahrq.​gov/​). Several important innovations of the program have already reached prominence in medical practice and are increasingly being incorporated into trauma care. Rapid Response Systems (RRS) were the inaugural medium used to incorporate inter-team knowledge, “boundary spanning” transition support, and communication utilizing a specific framework. Inter-team knowledge supports continuity of care between different levels or types of care within the hospital (e.g., from the OR to the Postanesthesia Care Unit) and expects that team members will have an understanding of roles and responsibilities within the team. The “SBAR” framework provides a standardized communication format for passing patient information and consists of the components situation (what is going on with the patient?), background (what is the clinical background or context?), assessment (what do I think the problem is?), and recommendations/request (what would I do or ask that my teammate do?). Evidence supports the positive impact of implementation of RRS and TeamSTEPPS [10], and various “how-to” guides are available to assist [12, 13].

MedTeams, a training medium developed by the Society of Trauma Nurses, similarly converts these concepts to apply to healthcare. The curriculum teaches teams to clarify the medical situation, use a callback system to enhance communication, support a culture of challenge (validate decisions by team members), delegate tasks to specific people, and communicate the plan to the entire team [14].



Individual Qualifications and Team Training


Appropriate individual education, training, and baseline qualifications are a requisite starting point for building the successful trauma team. However, individual qualifications alone are not enough; indeed, poorly coordinated or even conflicting experts in their field may produce inferior patient outcomes when compared to a well-rehearsed team whose individuals, while competent, may be mediocre by comparison. Emergency physicians, trauma surgeons, anesthesia providers, additional consultants, nursing staff, respiratory therapists, and medical technicians (like the Navy Hospital Corpsman) must converge upon the patient in a well-choreographed effort to save a life. No single specialty can do it all, and trauma is indeed a team sport [14]. A team is essentially defined as a small group of people with corresponding complementary skills, all working together to achieve a common goal. Effective teams are scalable and dynamic, performing both independent behaviors as well as interdependent and coordinated series of tasks [15].


Team-Based Principles


Again, a full discussion of principles such as leadership, adaptability, and assertiveness is included in earlier chapters. Many of these characteristics are not easily taught but must be developed through experience, introspection, and careful study. Thus, there is a need for simulations, drills, reviews, and feedback. Indeed, some principles, most notably leadership and decision making, are the focus of advanced study in many fields. While some have argued that traits such as leadership and adaptability are innate, growing evidence [16] suggests that even among those not so inclined, these skills can at least to some degree be learned. In many ways, leadership will “declare” itself in a trauma team, and team members will adapt to its presence (or absence) over time. Anyone who wishes to exert leadership within a trauma team should expect not only to know his or her field well but should also commit to continuously revisiting the study of leadership in adversity, human behavior, and communication.

Maintaining good situational awareness, as well as a healthy appreciation for how quickly the clinical (or operational) situation can change (adaptability), is critical, especially in a combat or mass casualty environment. The trauma team must not only anticipate the likely course of a specific injury but also respond seamlessly when the information changes—especially for the worse—and must do so in a non-accusatory manner if trust and communication are to be reinforced. Situational awareness generally involves three (or four) levels: perception, comprehension, and projection. Perception encompasses monitoring, cue detection, and simple recognition and leads to an individual awareness of current objects, events, people, systems, and environmental influences. Comprehension involves integration of the many varied perceived components, as well as an appreciation for how these factors may influence individual or team goals, objectives, and outcomes. Projection is achieved through taking the knowledge gained from perception and comprehension, and then extrapolating their likely impact on the patient or operational environment in a timely manner [17]. Personnel and supply status, the likelihood of additional incoming casualties, operating room availability, blood supply, en route care capability, evacuation assets, weather conditions, and current tactical or security situation must all be within the “scan” of the modern trauma team’s situational awareness, particularly when making patient care decisions in a deployed environment [18]. The trauma environment, much like the combat setting, implies dynamic conditions that routinely change in a split second, and therefore, situational awareness must become a product of the team, whereby “distributed cognition” becomes the team’s expected norm, significantly augmenting their previous performance.

Good communication naturally lends itself to distributed situational awareness, augmented trust, and teamwork. Familiarity as a team can also lead to the ability to “read” unspoken communication factors; body language, task distribution, command structure, team history, and individual personality considerations all play a role. It is broadly documented that errors in communication are responsible for approximately 60–80 % of all healthcare errors. Communication between team members must be clear and unambiguous and is most effective when members feel respected and empowered to participate [19].

Communication must be in a language that all team members can understand and not be “profession specific” (sometimes interpreted as condescending). Ideally, the communicator will make eye contact, will stop distractions or other tasks if possible, and will check understanding on the part of the intended receiver (e.g., by having them repeat back the information or request that was passed), all while minimizing any emotional factors. Unequivocal (“autocratic”) communication from a defined trauma team leader has been shown to contribute to improved team coordination, ATLS adherence, and secondary survey [11] performance and is often called for during stressful phases of initial evaluation and resuscitation. Conversely, once the patient has been stabilized and admitted, the multidisciplinary trauma/critical care team (intensivists, nurses, respiratory and physical therapists, pastoral care, interpreters, and many others) can ideally operate under a more collaborative governance [19].

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Oct 28, 2016 | Posted by in CRITICAL CARE | Comments Off on Putting It All Together: Quality Control in Trauma Team Training

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