Improvements in teamwork during neonatal resuscitation after interprofessional TeamSTEPPS training

Neonatal Netw. 2013 Jan-Feb;32(1):26-33. doi: 10.1891/0730-0832.32.1.26.

Abstract

Purpose: To determine the impact of interprofessional Team Strategies and Tools to Enhance Performance and Patient Safety (TeamSTEPPS ) training on teamwork skills during neonatal resuscitation.

Design: Teams of physicians, nurses, and respiratory therapists participated in TeamSTEPPS training that included simulation with an event-based approach. During the simulations, scripted medication order and performance errors were used to test teamwork skills. Measures of teamwork skills were obtained before and after the training using a prospective pretest-posttest design.

Sample: Forty-two physicians, nurses, and respiratory therapists.

Main outcome variable: Teamwork skills.

Result: Significant improvements in teamwork skills were seen in team structure, leadership, situation monitoring, mutual support, and communication (p ,.001). Challenges by nurses to a scripted medication order error doubled from 38 percent before the training to 77 percent after the training. The odds of a nurse challenging an incorrect medication dose from an attending neonatologist improved significantly. Detection and correction of inadequate chest compressions increased from 61.5 to 84.6 percent after the training.

MeSH terms

  • Clinical Competence
  • Educational Measurement
  • Humans
  • Infant, Newborn
  • Interdisciplinary Communication*
  • Leadership
  • Neonatal Nursing* / education
  • Neonatal Nursing* / methods
  • Patient Care Team*
  • Patient Safety
  • Problem-Based Learning / methods*
  • Resuscitation* / education
  • Resuscitation* / methods
  • Staff Development / methods