Auditing Your Briefings and Debriefings Process: Slide Presentation
AHRQ Safety Program for Surgery
Slide 1: AHRQ Safety Program for Surgery—Implementation
Auditing Your Briefings and Debriefings Process
Slide 2: Learning Objectives
- Recap the briefings and debriefings process.
- Adapt a briefing and debriefing audit tool for your operating room.
- Collect data on participation in operating room briefings and debriefings.
- Provide feedback to operating room staff and stakeholders.
Slide 3: Recapping Our Approach
Image: Three columns presenting CUSP, Reducing SSIs, and TRIP:
ADAPTIVE WORK:
Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program (CUSP):
Prework: Measure frontline perceptions of safety culture with HSOPS survey.
- Educate staff on science of safety.
- Identify defects.
- Partner with a senior executive.
- Learn from defects.
- Improve teamwork and communication.
TECHNICAL WORK:
Reducing Surgical Site Infections:
- Emerging evidence [Skin preparation, Normothermia, Glucose control, Antibiotic redosing].
- Local opportunities to improve.
- Collaborative learning.
Translating Research into Practice (TRiP):
- Summarize the evidence in a checklist.
- Identify local barriers to implementation.
- Measure performance.
- Ensure all patients get the evidence (Engage, Educate, Execute, Evaluate).
Slide 4: Why Briefings and Debriefings?
Teams perform better when they…
- Have a high quality plan.
- Share that plan.
- Learn and improve over time.
Briefings and debriefings can help, but they do not guarantee good planning.
Checking the box ≠ Mindful engagement
Slide 5: Why Briefings and Debriefings?
- Reduce communication breakdowns and operating room delays.1
- Reduce procedure and miscommunication-related disruptions and nursing time spent in the core.2
- Improve communication and teamwork, feasible given current workload.3
- Reduce rate of complications, surgical site infections (SSIs), and mortality.4
Slide 6: Auditing Briefing Practices
- Develop or adapt an auditing tool.
- Train observers.
- Collect data.
- Provide feedback.
Slide 7: Developing a Briefing Audit Tool
- What are the local expectations for briefings?
- What is the policy?
- What forms and structures should be in place?
- What are best practices outside of current expectations?
- Develop contingency plans.
- Are these reflected in your auditing tool?
- Modify tool to fit local needs.
- Modify other briefing tools in the literature.
Slide 8: Example Briefing Audit Tool5
- Briefing logistics.
- Briefing basics.
- Specific content.
- Participation.
Image: Sample briefing audit tool used at The Johns Hopkins Hospital.
Slide 9: Example Briefing Audit Tool5
Briefing logistics:
- Who initiated briefing?
- Was anyone using a script?
- When did briefing occur?
Image: Logistics section of briefing form:
Who initiated briefing?
- Surgery attending.
- Anesthesia attending.
- Surgery resident.
- Anesthesia resident.
- Nurse.
- Anesthesia CRNA.
Was anyone using a script?
- Yes.
- No.
When did briefing occur?
- Before patient entered.
- Before induction.
- Before incision.
Slide 10: Example Briefing Audit Tool5
Briefing basics:
- Introduce by name? By role?
- Discuss critical goals?
- Discuss contingency plan?
- Set expectation for assertiveness?
- State explicit opportunity for questions?
- Confirm agreement?
Image: Sample form questions, with space to record Yes or No responses:
- Did all introduce themselves by name?
- Did all introduce themselves by role?
- Critical goals and steps for case discussed?
- Pertinent contingency plans discussed?
- Expectation for assertiveness set? (e.g., ‘if anyone sees any problems, please speak up’)
- Explicit opportunity for questions or concerns?
- Explicit request for confirmation before moving on (e.g., ‘is everyone OK?’)
Slide 11: Example Briefing Audit Tool5
Specific content:
- Did briefing cover the patient, procedure, and site information?
- Antibiotics, airway risk, allergies?
- Bleeding concerns, blood availability, and glycemic control?
Image: Sample form questions with space to record Yes or No responses:
- Patient.
- Procedure.
- Site.
- Patient consent.
- Antibiotics (ABX) given.
- ABX redosing time.
- Beta blockers.
- Airway risk.
- Access issues.
- Bleeding concerns (e.g., anticoagulant use).
- Blood availability.
- Allergies.
- Glycemic control.
- Deep vein thrombosis prophylaxis.
- Warmers.
- Lab/radiology review.
- Intra-operative imaging (X-rays, ultrasound).
- Patient positioning.
- Skin preparation application.
Slide 12: Example Briefing Audit Tool5
Participation by role:
- Present or physically present in room?
- Paused other tasks or not engaged in other tasks during briefing?
- Spoke up or participated in the conversation?
- What issues were raised?
Image: Participation section of briefing audit tool
Slide 13: Training Observers
- Select observers:
- Who has the time and interest?
- How many observers do you need?
- Educate on the briefing audit tool:
- Explain the tool to observers.
- Allow observers to ask clarifying questions.
- Conduct a dry run:
- Score a briefing and discuss any inconsistencies.
- Use videos if possible.
Slide 14: Training Observers
- Select observers with a diverse range of skills:
- Medical students.
- Nurses.
- Residents.
- Fellows.
- Psychologists.
- Can achieve high reliability with minimal training.
Image: Chart showing briefing category and Mean Kappa (n=19 cases):
- Briefing basics 0.847.
- Specific content 0.820.
- Participation 0.569.
Explicit sections obtain higher reliability scores.
Slide 15: Collect Data
- Set boundaries:
- Specific department or service line?
- Create a sampling strategy:
- Given the boundaries you set and the resources you have, what number of observations should you target?
- How will you track observations? By intact team? By surgeon?
- Define process roles and responsibilities:
- Schedule observations.
- Plan data entry.
Slide 16: Briefing Basics
Image: Bar chart with YES (blue) and NO (red). Each row, or category, sums to 100%:
- Opportunity for questions - 20% Yes.
- Expectations for assertiveness - 0% Yes.
- Contingency plans - 10% Yes.
- Critical goals - 10% Yes.
- Role introduction - 50% Yes.
- Name introduction - 40% Yes.
Slide 17: Specific Briefing Content
Image: Bar chart with YES (blue) and NO (red). Each row, or category, sums to 100%:
- Skin preparation application - 0% Yes.
- Patient positioning - 20% Yes.
- Intraoperative imaging - 10% Yes.
- Lab/radiology review - 30% Yes.
- Warmers - 30% Yes.
- Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) prophylaxis - 100% Yes.
- Glycemic control - 40% Yes.
- Allergies - 100% Yes.
- Blood availability - 10% Yes.
- Anticoagulant use - 10% Yes.
- Access issues - 20% Yes.
- Airway risk - 20% Yes.
- Beta blockers - 40% Yes.
- Antibiotics redosing time - 0% Yes.
- Antibiotics given - 90% Yes.
- Patient consent - 60% Yes.
- Site - 70% Yes.
- Procedure - 80% Yes.
- Patient - 80% Yes.
Slide 18: Participation: Pausing Other Tasks
Image: Bar chart with NOT PRESENT (blue), and FAILS TO PAUSE (red), and PAUSES OTHER TASKS (green). Each row, or category, sums to 100%:
- Scrub - 0% NP, 80% FP, 20% POT.
- Circulator - 0% NP, 10% FP, 90% POT.
- Anesthesia resident - 78% NP, 0% FP, 22% POT.
- Anesthesia CRNA - 22% NP, 0% FP, 78% POT.
- Anesthesia attending - 66% NP, 12% FP, 22% POT.
- Surgical resident - 10% NP, 40% FP, 50% POT.
- Attending surgeon - 20% NP, 0% FP, 80% POT.
- Not Present = NP.
- Fails to Pause = FP.
- Pauses Other Tasks = POT.
Slide 19: Participation: Contributing to Briefing
Image: Bar chart with NOT PRESENT (blue), and DOES NOT CONTRIBUTE (red), and CONTRIBUTES (green). Each row, or category, sums to 100%:
- Scrub - 0% NP, 90% DNC, 10% C.
- Circulator - 0% NP, 0% DNC, 100% C.
- Anesthesia resident - 78% NP, 0% DNC, 22% C.
- Anesthesia CRNA - 22% NP, 0% DNC, 78% C.
- Anesthesia attending - 68% NP, 10% DNC, 22% C.
- Surgical resident - 10% NP, 60% DNC, 30% C.
- Attending surgeon - 0% NP, 40% DNC, 60% C.
Not Present = NP Does Not Contribute = DNC Contributes = C.
Slide 20: Provide Feedback
- Present data to stakeholders:
- Share at CUSP team and other staff meetings.
- Display charts in common areas.
- Use data to improve briefings:
- Coach and reinforce behaviors.
- Revise and refine expectations.
- Policies.
- Processes.
- Checklists.
Slide 21: References
- Nundy S, Mukherjee A, Sexton JB, et al. Impact of preoperative briefings on operating room delays: A preliminary report. Arch Surg 2008; 143(11):1068-1072. PMID: 19015465.
- Henrickson SE, Wadhera RK, ElBardissi AW, et al. Development and pilot evaluation of a preoperative briefing protocol for cardiovascular surgery. J Am Coll Surg 2009; 208(6):1115-1123. PMID: 19476900.
- Berenholtz SM, Schumacher K, Hayanga AJ, et al. Implementing standardized operating room briefings and debriefings at a large regional medical center. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf 2009; 35(8):391-397. PMID: 19719074.
- Haynes AB, Weiser TG, Lipsitz SR, et al.; Safe Surgery Saves Lives Study Group. A surgical Safety checklist to reduce morbidity and mortality in a global population. N Engl J Med 2009; 360(5)491-499. PMID: 19144931.
- Johnston FM, Tergas AI, Bennett JL, et al. Measuring briefing and debriefing checklist compliance in surgery: A tool for quality improvement. Am J Med Qual 2014 Nov-Dec; 29(6):491-8. Epub 2013 Nov 22. PMID: 24270170.
Slide 22: Hospital Case Study
Subtitle slide: [Hospital not identified by name or location.]
Slide 23: Debriefing: One Team’s Approach
- Two-sided form with four sections:
- Preoperative.
- Intraoperative.
- Postoperative.
- Followup.
- Placed on patient’s chart.
- Submitted at the case conclusion.
Slide 24: Debriefing Process
Image: The four categories are located in four boxes, with an arrow from one box pointing right to the next box (left to right):
PREOP
Front of the form.
- Preoperative nurse initiates.
- Primary perioperative team communication tool.
INTRAOP
Back of the form.
- Operating room nurse coordinates.
- Verify procedure, specimen, and postoperative management.
- Document debriefing comments including what went well, good catches, and improvement opportunities.
POSTOP
- Nurse-led handoff communication.
- Include procedure, medications, etc.
- Submit debriefing form to the operating room front desk.
FOLLOWUP
- Daily.
- Weekly.
- Monthly.
- Quarterly.
Slide 25: Debriefing Process
FOLLOWUP
Daily:
- Operating room clerical staff enters debriefing comments into a spreadsheet.
- Operating room charge nurse reviews the debriefing comments each day and adds followup instructions.
- Operating room charge nurse also notifies operating room management of any urgent safety matters.
Weekly:
- Operating room charge nurse and operating room management review compilation of briefing comments.
- Share followups with operating room staff during department huddles.
Monthly:
- Segment comments for each specialty and review in respective Highly Reliable Surgical Team (HRST) meetings.
- Post results on department communication board.
Quarterly:
- Share with regional HRST committee.
Slide 26: Examples of Debriefing Comments
Good catches and positive comments:
- Label of specimen.
- Correct procedure name.
- Impact of patient’s religion on care decisions.
- Staff came in to help.
- Consent did not match case schedule.
- Necessary equipment/instrumentation included.
Slide 27: Examples of Debriefing Comments
Concerns or opportunities for improvement:
- Scheduling errors.
- Radiology delay.
- Inferior disposable light handles.
- Instrument tray problem.
- Outdated preference card.
Slide 28: Examples of Debriefing Comments
Debriefing comments: Scheduling errors.
- Types of issues identified:
- Incorrect procedures in the electronic scheduling system.
- Laterality errors.
- Delays, incorrect instruments, or supplies.
- Safety issues.
- Followup:
- Met with clinic staff and surgeons.
- Provided additional education.
Slide 29: Examples of Debriefing Comments
Debriefing comments: Radiology delay.
- Issues identified:
- Radiology department initiated new process to request an x-ray technician.
- Voicemail messages not responsive enough for open surgical cases.
- Excessive delays upset surgeon and surgical team.
- Followup:
- Filtered all debriefing comments related to x-ray delay.
- Presented Radiology management with all comments.
- Modified call process to accommodate surgical needs.
Slide 30: Examples of Debriefing Comments
Debriefing comments: Inferior disposable light handles.
- Issues identified:
- Disposable light handles were changed.
- Providers expressed concern for quality including an increased likelihood of contamination.
- Followup:
- Contacted vendor.
- Changed product.
Slide 31: Examples of Debriefing Comments
Debriefing comments: Instrument tray problem.
- Issues identified:
- Count sheet mismatch to number of instruments in tray.
- Increase possibility of instrument count error.
- Followup:
- Worked with sterile equipment management regarding instrument discrepancies.
- Provided additional education to improve process and reduce errors in operating room.
Slide 32: Examples of Debriefing Comments
Debriefing comments: Outdated preference card.
- Issues identified:
- Outdated preference card caused delay in case.
- Incorrect supplies and instruments pulled.
- Followup:
- Operating room charge nurse assigned to update preference cards.
- Revised card system to standardize core needs by procedure with individual surgeon special requests.
Slide 33: Debriefing Process
Image: The four categories are located in four boxes, with an arrow from one box pointing right to the next box (left to right):
PREOP
Front of the form.
- Preoperative nurse initiates.
- Primary perioperative team communication tool.
INTRAOP
Back of the form.
- Operating room nurse coordinates.
- Verify procedure, specimen, and postoperative management.
- Document debriefing comments including what went well, good catches, and improvement opportunities.
POSTOP
- Nurse-led handoff communication.
- Include procedure, medications, etc.
- Submit debriefing form to the operating room front desk.
FOLLOWUP
- Daily.
- Weekly.
- Monthly.
- Quarterly.