Changes in written sign-out composition across hospitalization.
J Hosp Med. 2015 Jun 9;
Authors: Miller DM, Schapira MM, Visotcky AM, Laud P, Arora VM, Kordus A, Whittle J, Singh S, Fletcher KE
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inaccurate or incomplete information in the written portion of the patient handoff, or sign-out, may be associated with adverse events in hospitalized patients. Little is known about what information providers actually include in written sign-out documents and how sign-outs change over time.
OBJECTIVES: (1) Provide a descriptive analysis of initial and subsequent hospital day-written sign-out content, and (2) evaluate the relationship between team workload and sign-out composition.
DESIGN: Retrospective review of sign-out documents from a larger observational study of general medicine patients admitted to housestaff and hospitalist teams at 3 hospitals.
MAIN MEASURES: The presence of 13 components of a high-quality sign-out. We performed descriptive analyses and compared initial and subsequent day sign-outs for content.
KEY RESULTS: We reviewed 200 patient hospitalizations (200 initial handoffs, 580 subsequent day handoffs). Initial sign-out entries contained a mean of 7.54 (standard deviation: 2.27) key sign-out components. Subsequent day sign-outs contained a higher percentage of certain key elements but had more vague language. The number of elements present in the sign-out was reduced as patient census increased (r = -0.295, P < 0.01).
CONCLUSIONS: Sign-out composition changes over time, and is associated with workload. Future interventions to improve quality should take these factors into consideration. Journal of Hospital Medicine 2015. © 2015 Society of Hospital Medicine.
PMID: 26061434 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]