Background/Objectives: Among the factors contributing to medical errors and misdiagnosis, patient handoffs play a significant role. The negative impact of handoffs includes miscommunications, omissions, and information loss. Patient handoffs are inherent to emergency department (ED) patient care and are recognized as high-risk
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Background/Objectives: Among the factors contributing to medical errors and misdiagnosis, patient handoffs play a significant role. The negative impact of handoffs includes miscommunications, omissions, and information loss. Patient handoffs are inherent to emergency department (ED) patient care and are recognized as high-risk events. The aim of this study was to use a mixed-methods approach, incorporating a retrospective chart review and qualitative analysis, to understand emergency physicians’ perceptions of handoffs, including their impact on patient safety, patient flow, and patient satisfaction, as well as the strategies employed to manage handoffs and their perceived efficacy.
Methods: A seven-question online survey was distributed to 120 attending ED physicians employed across a large academic health system comprising six hospitals. Additionally, a 3-year retrospective chart review provided insights into avoidable handoffs in the ED.
Results: The survey responses showed that 69% of physicians believed that handoffs reduced patient safety, 55% felt that they reduced patient satisfaction, and 66% perceived them as contributing to longer patient stays. Additionally, 86% of physicians preferred to hand off no more than two patients, while 79% preferred to receive no more than two. Thematic content analysis identified key factors influencing physician preferences, including ownership, patient safety, patient flow, cooperation and colleagueship, and the challenges of continuing workups. To minimize handoffs, ED physicians primarily reported strategies such as staying late after shifts, restricting patient signups, and planning patient disposition toward the end of their shifts. Lastly, retrospective data analysis suggested that implementing one-hour overlapping shifts and restricting patient signups could reduce ED handoffs by 30%.
Conclusions: ED physicians perceive handoffs as affecting patient safety, patient satisfaction, and patient flow negatively and prefer fewer handoffs. Overlapping shifts and selective patient signup strategies may reduce handoffs.
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