Communication in The Clinical Routine of Neonatologists

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Communication in The Clinical Routine of Neonatologists. / Börner, Nele; Mache, Stefanie; Scutaru, Cristian; Metze, Boris; Bührer, Christoph.

in: Z GEBURTSH NEONATOL, Jahrgang 223, Nr. 2, 04.2019, S. 92-98.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

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Börner, N, Mache, S, Scutaru, C, Metze, B & Bührer, C 2019, 'Communication in The Clinical Routine of Neonatologists', Z GEBURTSH NEONATOL, Jg. 223, Nr. 2, S. 92-98. https://doi.org/10.1055/a-0651-5162

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@article{d8c10c57ce2c47e5aaccef4b65a560cb,
title = "Communication in The Clinical Routine of Neonatologists",
abstract = "INTRODUCTION: Communication is essential to clinical routine, especially in NICUs with their vulnerable patients and the special team caring for them. Communication breakdowns and resulting treatment errors are described in the literature. The aim of this study is to provide an initial quantitative assessment of medical communication in a NICU.METHODS: For task analysis, 15 Level III-NICU physicians were accompanied for 60 days in early and late shifts; each physician completed the COPSOQ questionnaire. Recorded tasks were assigned to main task categories and subcategories.RESULTS: A total of 550 h of main and 100 h of secondary tasks were recorded, on average 9 h daily. The most time-consuming main activity was {"}Communication{"} (3 h), followed by {"}Indirect care/Administration{"} (2 h) and {"}Direct patient care{"} (1.5 h). {"}Communication{"} mainly consisted of discussions with colleagues and during early shifts. At 2 min, communication with nursing personnel during rounds was especially low. Communication showed a negative correlation to physician job satisfaction.DISCUSSION: This work shows the suspected high proportion of communication in a NICU, especially among physicians themselves. The effectiveness of this communication is not assessable. However, a low proportion of communication with nursing staff is noticeable and reflects the variabiliy in team communication. Improvement of communication is necessary through training on and the application of existing techniques for handoffs and rounds.",
author = "Nele B{\"o}rner and Stefanie Mache and Cristian Scutaru and Boris Metze and Christoph B{\"u}hrer",
note = "{\textcopyright} Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.",
year = "2019",
month = apr,
doi = "10.1055/a-0651-5162",
language = "English",
volume = "223",
pages = "92--98",
journal = "Z GEBURTSH NEONATOL",
issn = "0948-2393",
publisher = "Georg Thieme Verlag KG",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Communication in The Clinical Routine of Neonatologists

AU - Börner, Nele

AU - Mache, Stefanie

AU - Scutaru, Cristian

AU - Metze, Boris

AU - Bührer, Christoph

N1 - © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.

PY - 2019/4

Y1 - 2019/4

N2 - INTRODUCTION: Communication is essential to clinical routine, especially in NICUs with their vulnerable patients and the special team caring for them. Communication breakdowns and resulting treatment errors are described in the literature. The aim of this study is to provide an initial quantitative assessment of medical communication in a NICU.METHODS: For task analysis, 15 Level III-NICU physicians were accompanied for 60 days in early and late shifts; each physician completed the COPSOQ questionnaire. Recorded tasks were assigned to main task categories and subcategories.RESULTS: A total of 550 h of main and 100 h of secondary tasks were recorded, on average 9 h daily. The most time-consuming main activity was "Communication" (3 h), followed by "Indirect care/Administration" (2 h) and "Direct patient care" (1.5 h). "Communication" mainly consisted of discussions with colleagues and during early shifts. At 2 min, communication with nursing personnel during rounds was especially low. Communication showed a negative correlation to physician job satisfaction.DISCUSSION: This work shows the suspected high proportion of communication in a NICU, especially among physicians themselves. The effectiveness of this communication is not assessable. However, a low proportion of communication with nursing staff is noticeable and reflects the variabiliy in team communication. Improvement of communication is necessary through training on and the application of existing techniques for handoffs and rounds.

AB - INTRODUCTION: Communication is essential to clinical routine, especially in NICUs with their vulnerable patients and the special team caring for them. Communication breakdowns and resulting treatment errors are described in the literature. The aim of this study is to provide an initial quantitative assessment of medical communication in a NICU.METHODS: For task analysis, 15 Level III-NICU physicians were accompanied for 60 days in early and late shifts; each physician completed the COPSOQ questionnaire. Recorded tasks were assigned to main task categories and subcategories.RESULTS: A total of 550 h of main and 100 h of secondary tasks were recorded, on average 9 h daily. The most time-consuming main activity was "Communication" (3 h), followed by "Indirect care/Administration" (2 h) and "Direct patient care" (1.5 h). "Communication" mainly consisted of discussions with colleagues and during early shifts. At 2 min, communication with nursing personnel during rounds was especially low. Communication showed a negative correlation to physician job satisfaction.DISCUSSION: This work shows the suspected high proportion of communication in a NICU, especially among physicians themselves. The effectiveness of this communication is not assessable. However, a low proportion of communication with nursing staff is noticeable and reflects the variabiliy in team communication. Improvement of communication is necessary through training on and the application of existing techniques for handoffs and rounds.

U2 - 10.1055/a-0651-5162

DO - 10.1055/a-0651-5162

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 30157497

VL - 223

SP - 92

EP - 98

JO - Z GEBURTSH NEONATOL

JF - Z GEBURTSH NEONATOL

SN - 0948-2393

IS - 2

ER -