Clinical handover
Clinical handover (patient handover or handover) is the transfer of professional responsibility and accountability for some or all aspects of care for a patient, or group of patients, to another person or professional group on a temporary or permanent basis.[1]
When critical clinical information emerges or there is a risk to patient care, timely communication of this information to the appropriate person(s) is essential to ensuring patient safety and delivery of the right care. Failure in handover is a major source in preventable patient harm. Clinical handover is an international concern and Australia, the United Kingdom and other countries have developed risk reduction recommendations.[1]
It is important to define and agree on the minimum information content for clinical handovers relevant to a service or discipline. It may be helpful to consider what clinical and non-clinical information is time critical or significant to patient care, such as:[2]
- New critical diagnostic or test results that require a change to care
- Changes in a patient’s physical and psychological condition, including unexpected deterioration or development of complications
- Follow-up communication following a review of results.
Use of structured handover tools can help to provide a framework for communicating the minimum information content for clinical handovers. This may be supported by electronic clinical handover templates.[3]
Examples of clinical handover tools to help structure handover:[2]
- ISBAR (Identify, Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendation)
- SBAR (Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendation)
- SHARED (Situation, History, Assessment, Risk, Expectation, Documentation)
- I PASS the BATON (Introduction, Patient, Assessment, Situation, Safety concerns, Background, Actions, Timing, Ownership, Next).
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b " Government of Western Australia Department of health, Clinical handover, Retrieved 15 September 2012". Archived from the original on 21 March 2012. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- ^ a b "Communicating for Safety Standard". Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care. Retrieved 22 June 2024.
- ^ Wendy Chaboyer et al, Bedside Handover; One Quality Improvement Strategy to “Transform Care at the Bedside”, Retrieved 15 September 2012