learnbench.htm Research TeamSTEPPS® Instructor GuideTeamSTEPPS Learning BenchmarksINSTRUCTIONS: These questions focus on medical teamwork and communication and their effect on quality and safety in patient care. For each of the following questions, please circle the letter next to the one best answer.A nurse is called to the phone to receive a telephone order from the doctor about a patient she is taking care of today. After clearly establishing the patient and physician identities, the BEST procedure for the nurse would be Listening to the order, calling the pharmacist, writing the details on the order sheet, and bringing the drug to the bedside.Refusing to take this telephone order and indicating that she can't be sure of the physician's thought processListening to the order, repeating back what the doctor said, and then writing it down in the patient's medical record.Listening to the order, asking the charge nurse how to spell the drug's name, asking the family member if that was in the plan for today and carrying out the order.Listening to the order, writing it on the order page, reading the order back to the physician and seeking his verification of the order's accuracy.A nurse is very concerned about a baby he is taking care of and feels it would be best to have the attending pediatrician come to the bedside immediately to evaluate. Checking around the unit, he locates the pediatrician, but she is busy dictating a consultation. The nurse's BEST action is to Wait quietly, but tap his foot rhythmically to indicate urgencyQuickly explain the infant's worrisome appearance and state, "I need you right now!Walk away, planning to check back in a few minutesInterrupt, shake her shoulder and pull her quickly toward the cribLeave his pager number with the clerk with instructions to have her callA surgeon, anesthesiologist, nurse and technologist are in the OR for a complicated case, which will start shortly. The surgeon, as team leader, should Go scrub and tell the circulating nurse to "get the ball rolling."Reassure the new team that she had plenty of experience with tough cases like this one and not to worry, and say, "I'll tell you what you need to know."Introduce herself, briefly describe the situation, plan, and potential pitfalls and ask for input from the team members.Explain the need for extra speed during this complicated case and set expectations for rapid turnover between cases.Pull out the X-rays and textbook and explain the details of the surgery to the rest of the crew, emphasizing the strict need for following protocolsThe team is making great progress with the procedure until the nurse recognizes that the doctor is clearly making a dangerous mistake in asking for a dose that is ten times the usual dose! Very concerned, she asks the doctor if he's sure that is what's wanted. Giving her a nasty look, he growls, "Well, that's what I asked for, isn't it?.." Confident that the dose is way off base, her next action should be to Walk away and indicate discouragement at being treated so rudelySay loudly, "that's a huge mistake, doctor; nobody uses a dose like that!"Not say anything for fear of making the doctor even more angryAsk the secretary to put in a stat page to the nursing supervisorSay, "I'm very concerned about the safety of that dose, doctor; it's much higher than I've ever seen given."For the real-life situation in question 4 above, a nurse in the same circumstances, but NOT confident and NOT positive that the dose is too high, but still very concerned about the patient's safety, should take the following course of action Walk away and indicate discouragement at being treated so rudelySay loudly, "that's a huge mistake, doctor; nobody uses a dose like that!"Not say anything for fear of making the doctor even more angryAsk the secretary to put in a stat page to the nursing supervisorSay, "I'm very concerned about the safety of that dose, doctor; it's much higher than I've ever seen given."The doctor on this procedure team (questions 4 and 5), upon being challenged by the nurse about the potentially dangerous medication dose, and realizing she is right, should respond by Demanding that this nurse be replaced immediatelySaying," You're right. Thanks for watching my back; it's been a bad day."Saying, "I'm the doctor, do what I say."Calling his partner on his cell phone and discuss the caseTell the worried patient, "sometimes these dosages are confusing."If the doctor, in fact, is correct in his dosage (question 4) and the nurse was incorrect in her memory of the proper medication dosage, when this is suspected, the doctor's BEST action would be to: Call the pharmacist and ask her to send a package insert to reviewLet the nurse know, in no uncertain terms, how it is inappropriate to challenge a senior physicianRequest that the nurse be sent for retraining and put a notation in her fileStop action, verify the correct dose and thank the nurse for her concern regarding patient safetyCall the team together afterwards and have the nurse explain her mistakeA night nurse is concerned about the changing circumstances for an inpatient and knows it will be necessary to call and awaken the covering physician. Getting his thoughts and information together, he plans to structure the phone call using a proven structured communication technique, SBAR. He plans to introduce himself, identify the patient and describe Situation, Background, Assessment, RecommendationsSleep, Bathroom Activities, ResultsSystems, Background, Alimentary, RespiratoryHis pleasant memories of summer vacation at the S-BAR RanchSocial Background, Assurance, ReassuranceIn the ambulatory clinic, the primary care team is evaluating a patient who likely will need an urgent referral to a specialist. Continuity of care and patient safety are usually enhanced by all of the following EXCEPT: Considering the specialist to be part of the treatment team and sharing informationWithholding the reason for referral from the patient to decrease fearUsing a structured and detailed handoff documentCreating a reminder for seeking the lab and consultation resultsInstructing the patient to call if he hasn't yet been seen in a certain timeframeAfter an unsuccessful effort by the code team, the most helpful pathway toward team performance improvement involves The leader telling everyone what they did wrongMeeting as a team to debrief the eventsExplaining the protocol deviationsBlaming the people who made mistakesAttending the autopsyDuring closure of a complex surgical case, the sponge count comes up one short after two careful counts. The surgeon ignores the request by the circulating nurse to help find a solution and continues the closure. The BEST action for the concerned circulating nurse would be to Explain the current hospital policy and required actionsPage the medical directorCall the OR supervisorScream at the doctor to stop the closureConvince the anesthesiologist to make the surgeon respondThe new resident working in the clinic is having real difficulties interacting with the nurse (who has been working there for a decade). The nurse continually is telling her what to do, but in front of the patients. The BEST course of action for the resident is to: Tell the nurse to stop undercutting herAsk the nurse for a quick meeting to discuss criticisms in front of patientsTell the clinic manager to have a talk with the nurseComplain to the attending that the nurse is hypercritical and ineffectiveJust let the patients know that the nurse is having a bad dayThe technologist is setting up for a procedure and notices that the doctor seems to be on the wrong side of the patient and may be making a mistake. The doctor has often been short tempered around the nurses and techs and doesn't take suggestions very well. The BEST action for the technologist is to: Call for a supervisor to come into the roomQuietly observe and hope that the doctor noticesLet the patient and doctor figure it outAsk the doctor if he knows what he is doingCall for a "time-out" to verify the procedureA nurse working in the Emergency Department overhears the doctor on the team make a misstatement about a sick patient, a comment that could result in a medical error and poor outcome. The nurse's correction of the misstatement is BEST interpreted as A breach of etiquette in the Emergency DepartmentAn interference in the doctor's businessAn action of cross monitoring that makes teamwork saferAn action the doctor will likely get defensive aboutA wrong-headed approach to teamworkIn the interest of patient care quality and safety, it is expected and mandatory that Conflict is avoided at all costPeople always do the right thingMembers speak up if they are concernedLeaders not make mistakesEveryone will agree with the planINSTRUCTIONS: For each of this series of questions, based on your knowledge of medical communication, teamwork, and patient care quality and safety, select the one BEST answer.B-1. The attribute LEAST likely to be found in a medical team that is functioning in a HIGHLY EFFECTIVE manner isAdaptabilityComplacencyTrustRespectInformation sharingB-2. Recent research about the causes of errors in healthcare delivery focuses increasingly onOutdated equipmentIncompetent providersSystem problemsLack of caringStupidityB-3. Who is the leader in medical teams?DoctorNurseSupervisorIt depends on circumstancesPatientB-4. The best communication tool or method to get critical information to the whole team during an emergency or complex procedure isCall-outCheck-backWrite it on the white boardWrite it in the ordersTime-outB-5. The main reason hierarchy can be a problem in a medical team setting is thatThe team leader may be obnoxiousMembers having important information may not speak up or be heardThe nurse and doctor may disagreePatients may be upset at the team being bossed aroundIt results in significant pay inequityB-6. A shared mental model is key for medical team members primarily becauseThey need to have visionThey all need to have the same understanding of the planA mind is a terrible thing to wasteOtherwise, leaders may go adriftOtherwise, patients will be confusedB-7. The following are human factor problems that research has identified as contributing to medical error EXCEPTHigh workloadFatigueDistractionsFriendship in the workplaceConflict and angerB-8. The BEST method of conflict resolution for medical teams in the workplace isCompromiseAccommodationAvoidanceCollaboration using the DESC scriptDominanceTeamSTEPPS Learning Benchmarks - Answer KeyThis matrix presents the BEST ANSWER and relates the question to specific TeamSTEPPS Curriculum, including tools and strategies.QATools, Strategies or Concepts Covered1ERead-backCommunication accuracyCorrect sequenceDistinguish from check back or say back2BExpress version of SBARExplicit communicationAction orientedTeam priorities3CTeam briefCreate a shared mental modelRespect for the input from allSharing the right information4ETwo-Challenge ruleCUS (Concerned-Patient Safety)Error reduction strategyMaybe cross monitoring5EDitto aboveTries to emphasize that the nurse didn't have to know for sure that it was wrong..needs to speak up anyway if concernedTeam dynamics6BResponse to two challenges by the nurseTeam dynamicsAcknowledgementRespect for team inputFocus on the patient and safety7DProper response to the question and concern for patient safetyStop the line; resolve the confusionRespect the inputTeam dynamicFocus on the safety, not the errorA debrief would be good, but not to have the nurse "explain her mistakes"8ASBAR9BAmbulatory settingPrimary-Specialist referralHandoffConsidering strategies to avoid likely errors in primary care, such as follow-upPatient as part of the team10BDebrief-the word more than the conceptDeals with issues of blame and error11AConflictUnreasonable behaviorSolve it within the team if possibleCould DESC-IT, but probably not necessaryReferring to the policy and required actions should bring about the agreement to get an XRay (as is required)12BConflict resolutionSolve it at the team levelPower differentialKnowledge differentialCriticism undermining patient relationshipAction: meet to discuss (in private)13ETeam dynamicsSpeaking up despite the hierarchy and difficult doctorUse the "time-out" policy on behalf of patient safetyAnyone can call for clarification14CCross monitoringProtecting the patient15DSpeak up about any patient concerns (mandatoryThe other choice speak to reality issues for teams, differences from the idealB-1BComplacency is not an attribute for highly effective teams; the others generally are seen in high performing teamsB-2CSystem problems and complexityB-3DIt depends: the nurse may be the team leader in many venues: ED, L&D, med-surg units, etc. The physician/surgeon may be the team leader in the OR, Clinic, etc. The Patient could be the team leader in the home or rehab settingB-4ACall-outB-5BHierarchySpeak upBe heardLeadership, decision making needs input from the whole teamB-6BNeed to have the same understanding of the plan and situationShared mental modelB-7DHuman factorsHigh workloadDistractionsConflictAngerB-8DConflict resolutionDESC scriptCollaborationReturn to Contents Current as of December 2012 Internet Citation: learnbench.htm. December 2012. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/professionals/education/curriculum-tools/teamstepps/instructor/reference/learnbench.html