Please Graph the Lineã¢â‚¬â€¹ Again This Time Using Both theã¢â‚¬â€¹ Xintercept and theã¢â‚¬â€¹ Yintercept
Contents
TeamSTEPPS®          
          Framework and Competencies
          Key Principles
Team Structure
          Multi-Team System For Patient Care
Communication
          SBAR
          Call-Out
          Check-Back
          Handoff
          "I PASS THE BATON"
Leadership
          Effective Team Leaders
          Team Events
          Brief Checklist
          Debrief Checklist
Situation Monitoring
          Situation Monitoring Process
          STEP
          Cross-Monitoring
          I'M SAFE Checklist
Mutual Support
          Task Assistance
          Feedback
          Advocacy and Assertion
          Two-Challenge Rule
          CUS
          DESC Script
Team Performance Observation Tool
Barriers,Tools & Strategies, and Outcomes
Contact Information
TeamSTEPPS®
Framework and Competencies
Team Competency Outcomes
          
        
[D] Select for Text Description
Knowledge
- Shared Mental Model.
 
Attitudes
- Mutual Trust.
 - Team Orientation.
 
Performance
- Adaptability.
 - Accuracy.
 - Productivity.
 - Efficiency.
 - Safety.
 
TeamSTEPPS has five key principles. It is based on team structure and four teachable-learnable skills: Communication, Leadership, Situation Monitoring, and Mutual Support. The arrows depict a two-way dynamic interplay between the four skills and the team-related outcomes. Interaction between the outcomes and skills is the basis of a team striving to deliver safe, quality care and support quality improvement. Encircling the four skills is the team structure of the patient care team, which represents not only the patient and direct caregivers, but also those who play a supportive role within the health care delivery system.
...TeamSTEPPS is an evidence-based framework to optimize team performance across the health care delivery system.
Key Principles
Team Structure
Identification of the components of a multi-team system that must work together effectively to ensure patient safety.
Communication
Structured process by which information is clearly and accurately exchanged among team members.
Leadership
Ability to maximize the activities of team members by ensuring that team actions are understood, changes in information are shared, and team members have the necessary resources.
Situation Monitoring
Process of actively scanning and assessing situational elements to gain information or understanding, or to maintain awareness to support team functioning.
Mutual Support
Ability to anticipate and support team members' needs through accurate knowledge about their responsibilities and workload.
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Team Structure
          
        
[D] Select for Text Description
Multi-Team System For Patient Care
Safe and efficient care involves the coordinated activities of a multi-team system.
          
        
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Communication
          
        
[D] Select for Text Description
SBAR
A technique for communicating critical information that requires immediate attention and action concerning a patient's condition
Situation—What is going on with the patient?
"I am calling about Mrs. Joseph in room 251. Chief complaint is shortness of breath of new onset."
Background—What is the clinical background or context?
"Patient is a 62 year old female post-op day one from abdominal surgery. No prior history of cardiac or lung disease."
Assessment—What do I think the problem is?
"Breath sounds are decreased on the right side with acknowledgement of pain. Would like to rule-out pneumothorax."
Recommendation and Request—What would I do to correct it?
"I feel strongly the patient should be assessed now. Can you come to room 251 now?"
Call-Out
Strategy used to communicate important or critical information
- Informs all team members simultaneously during emergent situations.
 - Helps team members anticipate next steps.
 - Important to direct responsibility to a specific individual responsible for carrying out the task.
 
Example during an incoming trauma:
            Leader:            "Airway status?"            
            Resident:"Airway clear"            
            Leader:            "Breath sounds?"            
            Resident:  "Breath sounds decreased on right"            
            Leader:"Blood pressure?"            
            Nurse:"BP is 96/62"          
Check-Back
Using closed-loop communication to ensure that information conveyed by the sender is understood by the receiver as intended.
The steps include the following:
- Sender initiates the message.
 - Receiver accepts the message and provides feedback.
 - Sender double-checks to ensure that the message was received.
 
Example:
            Doctor:            "Give 25 mg Benadryl IV push"            
            Nurse:            "25 mg Benadryl IV push"            
            Doctor:            "That's correct"          
Handoff
The transfer of information (along with authority and responsibility) during transitions in care across the continuum. It includes an opportunity to ask questions, clarify, and confirm.
Examples of transitions in care include shift changes; transfer of responsibility between and among nursing assistants, nurses, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and physicians; and patient transfers.
Handoff
Strategy designed to enhance information exchange during transitions in care
| "I PASS THE BATON" | ||
|---|---|---|
| I | Introduction | Introduce yourself and your role/job (include patient). | 
| P | Patient | Name, identifiers, age, sex, location. | 
| A | Assessment | Present chief complaint, vital signs, symptoms, and diagnosis. | 
| S | Situation | Current status/circumstances, including code status, level of (un)certainty, recent changes, and response to treatment. | 
| S | Safety | Critical lab values/reports, socioeconomic factors, allergies, and alerts (falls, isolation, etc.). | 
| THE | ||
| B | Background | Comorbidities, previous episodes, current medications, and family history. | 
| A | Actions | Explain what actions were taken or are required. Provide rationale. | 
| T | Timing | Level of urgency and explicit timing and prioritization of actions. | 
| O | Ownership | Identify who is responsible (person/team), including patient/family members. | 
| N | Next | What will happen next? Anticipated changes? What is the plan? Are there contingency plans?  |             
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Leadership
          
        
[D] Select for Text Description
Effective Team Leaders
The following are responsibilities of effective team leaders:
- Organize the team.
 - Identify and articulate clear goals (i.e., the plan).
 - Assign tasks and responsibilities.
 - Monitor and modify the plan; communicate changes.
 - Review the team's performance; provide feedback when needed.
 - Manage and allocate resources.
 - Facilitate information sharing.
 - Encourage team members to assist one another.
 - Facilitate conflict resolution in a learning environment.
 - Model effective teamwork.
 
Team Events
Sharing the Plan
- Brief—Short session prior to start to share the plan, discuss team formation, assign roles and responsibilities, establish expectations and climate, anticipate outcomes and likely contingencies.
 
Monitoring and Modifying the Plan
- Huddle—Ad hoc meeting to re-establish situational awareness, reinforce plans already in place, and assess the need to adjust the plan.
 
Reviewing the Team's Performance
- Debrief—Informal information exchange session designed to improve team performance and effectiveness through lessons learned and reinforcement of positive behaviors.
 
Brief Checklist
During the brief, the team should address the following questions:
___ Who is on the team?
___ Do all members understand and agree upon goals?
___ Are roles and responsibilities understood?
___ What is our plan of care?
___ What is staff and provider's availability throughout the shift?
___ How is workload shared among team members?
___ What resources are available?
Debrief Checklist
The team should address the following questions during a debrief:
___ Was communication clear?
___ Were roles and responsibilities understood?
___ Was situation awareness maintained?
___ Was workload distribution equitable?
___ Was task assistance requested or offered?
___ Were errors made or avoided?
___ Were resources available?
___ What went well?
___ What should improve?
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Situation Monitoring
          
        
[D] Select for Text Description
Situation Monitoring Process
          
        
Situation monitoring is the process of continually scanning and assessing a situation to gain and maintain an understanding of what's going on around you.
Situation awareness is the state of "knowing what's going on around you."
A shared mental model results from each team member maintaining situation awareness and ensures that all team members are "on the same page."
STEP
A tool for monitoring situations in the delivery of health care
Components of Situation Monitoring:
          
        
Status of the Patient
Team Members
Environment
Progress Toward Goal
Tool to help assess health care situations
STEP
          Status          of Patient
          __ Patient History
          __ Vital Signs
          __ Medications
          __ Physical Exam
          __ Plan of Care
          __ Psychosocial Issues
          Team          Members
          __ Fatigue
          __ Workload
          __ Task Performance
          __ Skill
          __ Stress
          Environment          
          __ Facility Information
          __ Administrative Information
          __ Human Resources
          __ Triage Acuity
          __ Equipment
          Progress          Towards Goal
          __ Status of Team's Patient(s)?
          __ Established Goals of Team?
          __ Tasks/Actions of Team?
          __ Plan Still Appropriate?
Cross-Monitoring
A harm error reduction strategy that involves:
- Monitoring actions of other team members.
 - Providing a safety net within the team.
 - Ensuring that mistakes or oversights are caught quickly and easily.
 - "Watching each other's back."
 
Situation Monitoring
Each team member is responsible for assessing his or her own safety status.
I'M SAFE Checklist
__            I            = Illness
            __M            = Medication
            __S            = Stress
            __            A            = Alcohol and Drugs
            __            F            = Fatigue
            __            E            = Eating and Elimination
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Mutual Support
          
        
[D] Select for Text Description
Task Assistance
Helping others with tasks builds a strong team. Key strategies include:
- Team members protect each other from work overload situations.
 - Effective teams place all offers and requests for assistance in the context of patient safety.
 - Team members foster a climate where it is expected that assistance will be actively sought and offered.
 
Feedback
Information provided to team members for the purpose of improving team performance.
Feedback should be:
- Timely—given soon after the target behavior has occurred.
 - Respectful—focus on behaviors, not personal attributes.
 - Specific—relates to a specific task or behavior that requires correction or improvement.
 - Directed towards improvement—provides directions for future improvement.
 - Considerate—consider a team member's feelings and deliver negative information with fairness and respect.
 
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Advocacy and Assertion
Advocate for the patient
- Invoked when team members' viewpoints don't coincide with that of the decisionmaker.
 
Assert a corrective action in a firm and respectful manner
- Make an opening.
 - State the concern.
 - State the problem (real or perceived).
 - Offer a solution.
 - Reach agreement on next steps.
 
Two-Challenge Rule
Empowers all team members to "stop the line" if they sense or discover an essential safety breach.
When an initial assertive statement is ignored:
- It is your responsibility to assertively voice concern at least two times to ensure that it has been heard.
 - The team member being challenged must acknowledge that concern has been heard.
 - If the safety issue still hasn't been addressed:              
- Take a stronger course of action.
 - Utilize supervisor or chain of command.
 
 
CUS
Assertive statements:
          
        
DESC Script
A constructive approach for managing and resolving conflict
D —Describe the specific situation or behavior; provide concrete data.
E —Express how the situation makes you feel/what your concerns are.
S —Suggest other alternatives and seek agreement.
C —Consequences should be stated in terms of impact on established team goals; strive for consensus.
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Team Performance Observation Tool
|                 Team Structure                 Assembles team. Assigns or identifies team members' roles and responsibilities. Holds team members accountable. Includes patients and families as part of the team.  |             
|                 Communication                 Provides brief, clear, specific, and timely information. Seeks information from all available sources. Uses check-backs to verify information that is communicated. Uses SBAR, call-outs, check-backs, and handoff techniques to communicate effectively with team members.  |             
|                 Leadership                 Identifies team goals and vision. Utilizes resources efficiently to maximize team performance. Balances workload within the team. Delegates tasks or assignments, as appropriate. Conducts briefs, huddles, and debriefs. Role models teamwork behaviors.  |             
|                 Situation Monitoring                 Monitors the state of the patient. Monitors fellow team members to ensure safety and prevent errors. Monitors the environment for safety and availability of resources (e.g., equipment). Monitors progress toward the goal and identifies changes that could alter the care plan. Fosters communication to ensure a shared mental model.  |             
|                 Mutual Support                 Provides task-related support and assistance. Provides timely and constructive feedback to team members. Effectively advocates for the patient using the Assertive Statement, Two-Challenge Rule, or CUS. Uses the Two-Challenge Rule or DESC script to resolve conflict.  |             
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| Barriers | Tools & Strategies | Outcomes | 
|---|---|---|
                
  |                                Communication 
 Leading Teams 
 Situation Monitoring 
 Mutual Support 
  |                               
  |             
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Contact Information
To learn more about TeamSTEPPS, refer to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Web site:
http://teamstepps.ahrq.gov/
          and the Department of Defense Patient Safety Program Web site:
http://www.health.mil/dodpatientsafety
Developed for the Department of Defense Patient Safety Program in collaboration with the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
TeamSTEPPS™ Pocket Guide—2.0
          ISBN 1-58763-191-1
            Revised December 2013        
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Source: https://www.ahrq.gov/teamstepps/instructor/essentials/pocketguide.html
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