eMJA     The Medical Journal of Australia

Home | Issues | eMJA shop | Classifieds | Contact | More... | Topics | Search | Login | Buy full access   

Supplement

Handover — Enabling Learning in Communication for Safety (HELiCS): a report on achievements at two hospital sites

Rick Iedema, Eamon T Merrick, Ross Kerridge, Robert Herkes, Bonne Lee, Mike Anscombe, Dorrilyn Rajbhandari, Mark Lucey and Les White
MJA 2009; 190 (11): S133-S136
Abstract
  • Clinical handover is an area of critical concern, because deficiencies in handover pose a patient safety risk. Redesign of handover must allow for input from frontline staff to ensure that designs fit into existing practices and settings.

  • The HELiCS (Handover — Enabling Learning in Communication for Safety) tool uses a “video-reflexive” technique: handover encounters are videotaped and played back to the practitioners involved for analysis and discussion.

  • Using the video-reflexive process, staff of an emergency department and an intensive care unit at two different tertiary hospitals redesigned their handover processes.

  • The HELiCS study gave staff greater insight into previously unrecognised clinical and operational problems, enhanced coordination and efficiency of care, and strengthened junior–senior communication and teaching.

  • Our study showed that reflexive and “bottom-up” handover redesign can produce outcomes that harbour local fit, practitioner ownership and (to date) sustainability.

Home | Issues | eMJA shop | Terms of use | Classifieds | More... | Contact | Topics | Search

The Medical Journal of Australia    eMJA  

©The Medical Journal of Australia 2009 www.mja.com.au PRINT ISSN: 0025-729X ONLINE ISSN: 1326-5377