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Asymmetry in patient-related information disrupts pre-anesthetic patient briefing.


ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: If one party has more or better information than the other, an information asymmetry can be assumed. The aim of the study was to identify the origin of incomplete patient-related preoperative information, which led to disruptions and losses of time during pre-anaesthetic patient briefing. We hypothesized that lower employees' educational level increases the amount of disruptive factors. METHODS: A prospective observational study design was used. Patient selection was depending on the current patient flow in the area of the clinic for pre-anesthetic patient briefing. Data were collected over a period of 8 weeks. A stopwatch was used to record the time of disruptive factors. Various causes of time losses were grouped to facilitate statistical evaluation, which was performed by using the U-test of Mann and Whitney, Chi-square test or the Welch-t-test, as required. RESULTS: Out of 221 patients, 130 patient briefings (58.8%) had been disrupted. Residents were affected more often than consultants (66% vs. 47%, p?=?0.008). Duration of disruptions was independent of the level of training and lasted about 2,5 minutes and 10% of the total time of patient briefing. Most time-consuming disruptive factors were missing study results, incomplete case histories, and limited patient compliance. CONCLUSIONS: Disruptions during pre-anesthetic patient briefings that were caused by patient-related information asymmetry are common and account for a significant loss of time. The resultant costs justify investments in appropriate personnel allocation.

SUBMITTER: Schnoor J 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3851798 | biostudies-other | 2013

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Asymmetry in patient-related information disrupts pre-anesthetic patient briefing.

Schnoor Joerg J   Kupfer Anja A   Jurack Babette B   Reuter Ulrike U   Wrigge Herrmann H   Friese Steffen S   Thieme Volker V  

BMC anesthesiology 20131004 1


<h4>Background</h4>If one party has more or better information than the other, an information asymmetry can be assumed. The aim of the study was to identify the origin of incomplete patient-related preoperative information, which led to disruptions and losses of time during pre-anaesthetic patient briefing. We hypothesized that lower employees' educational level increases the amount of disruptive factors.<h4>Methods</h4>A prospective observational study design was used. Patient selection was dep  ...[more]

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