Defining conditions for effective interdisciplinary care team communication in an open surgical intensive care unit: A qualitative study

Carmen M. Diaz, Abahuje Egide, Andrew Berry, Miriam Rafferty, Ali Amro, Kaithlyn Tesorero, Michael Shapiro, Bona Ko, Whitney Jones, John D. Slocum, Julie Johnson, Anne Madeleine Stey*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective Poor interdisciplinary care team communication has been associated with increased mortality. The study aimed to define conditions for effective interdisciplinary care team communication. Design An observational cross-sectional qualitative study. Setting A surgical intensive care unit in a large, urban, academic referral medical centre. Participants A total 6 interviews and 10 focus groups from February to June 2021 (N=33) were performed. Interdisciplinary clinicians who cared for critically ill patients were interviewed. Participants included intensivist, transplant, colorectal, vascular, surgical oncology, trauma faculty surgeons (n=10); emergency medicine, surgery, gynaecology, radiology physicians-in-training (n=6), advanced practice providers (n=5), nurses (n=7), fellows (n=1) and subspecialist clinicians such as respiratory therapists, pharmacists and dieticians (n=4). Audiorecorded content of interviews and focus groups were deidentified and transcribed verbatim. The study team iteratively generated the codebook. All transcripts were independently coded by two team members. Primary outcome Conditions for effective interdisciplinary care team communication. Results We identified five themes relating to conditions for effective interdisciplinary care team communication in our surgical intensive care unit setting: role definition, formal processes, informal communication pathways, hierarchical influences and psychological safety. Participants reported that clear role definition and standardised formal communication processes empowered clinicians to engage in discussions that mitigated hierarchy and facilitated psychological safety. Conclusions Standardising communication and creating defined roles in formal processes can promote effective interdisciplinary care team communication by fostering psychological safety.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere075470
JournalBMJ open
Volume13
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 13 2023

Funding

This study was funded by the Northwestern Memorial Insurance Company.

Keywords

  • adult intensive & critical care
  • clinical reasoning
  • emotional intelligence
  • health services administration & management
  • interprofessional relations
  • organisational development

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Medicine

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