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Journal of Perioperative Nursing

Holding bay nurse

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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Handover Using Isbar Principles In Two Perioperative Sites – A Quality Improvement Project, Patricia Kitney, Raymond Tam, David Bramley, Koen Simons Dec 2020

Handover Using Isbar Principles In Two Perioperative Sites – A Quality Improvement Project, Patricia Kitney, Raymond Tam, David Bramley, Koen Simons

Journal of Perioperative Nursing

Background

ISBAR is a structured approach to communication between health care providers, particularly for the purpose of transferring patient clinical care. The ISBAR acronym refers to Identification, Situation, Background, Assessment and Request or Recommendation.

This paper provides the final report on a quality improvement project (QIP) that was carried out in the perioperative unit at two campuses of a large Melbourne metropolitan hospital. The final phase of this project addressed the concluding audits measuring compliance with ISBAR handover principles at selected handover episodes during the patient care journey through the perioperative suite. The previous two phases established baseline data for …


Perioperative Handover Using Isbar At Two Sites: A Quality Improvement Project, Patricia Kitney Dec 2018

Perioperative Handover Using Isbar At Two Sites: A Quality Improvement Project, Patricia Kitney

Journal of Perioperative Nursing

Background:The use of ISBAR handover principles assists in enabling the provision of best care to perioperative patients1. Reviews of post-operative handover research studies confirm the positive association between the quality of handovers and the decrease in adverse patient events2,3. Other reviews identify that globally handovers can be highly unpredictable and unreliable3–6. Therefore, the argument for standardised handovers to reduce the probability of adverse patient events in comparison to unstructured handovers, which have been shown to increase the chances of adverse patient events, is worth investigating.

Method:The method used was a multisite quasi-experimental design involving audits of perioperative handovers …