Clinical Handover among Nurses in an Emergency Setting: FacilitatorsandBarriers
Background: Clinical handover in emergency settings is a crucial and complex process involving transferring patient care responsibilities and information. Objective: It identified the facilitators and barriers to clinical handover among nurses in an emergency setting. Methods: This descriptive quali...
Published in: | Malaysian Journal of Nursing |
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Asia Pacific Higher Learning Sdn Bhd., Lincoln University College
2024
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2-s2.0-85211121520 Ahayalimudin N.; Noh H.M.; Norazman N.Z.Z.; Subri N.S.; Akhlak S.M. Clinical Handover among Nurses in an Emergency Setting: FacilitatorsandBarriers 2024 Malaysian Journal of Nursing 16 2 10.31674/MJN.2024.V16I02.001 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85211121520&doi=10.31674%2fMJN.2024.V16I02.001&partnerID=40&md5=24afc2568ce490c574201ba55715f657 Background: Clinical handover in emergency settings is a crucial and complex process involving transferring patient care responsibilities and information. Objective: It identified the facilitators and barriers to clinical handover among nurses in an emergency setting. Methods: This descriptive qualitative study involves fourteen nurses from the emergency department of a teaching hospital in the East Coast region of Malaysia. The data was collected from one-on-one interviews using a topic guide. Results: The study acknowledged seven facilitators: learning from various approaches, the information that needs to be relayed, the accuracy and precision of the information, the clinical handover at the bedside, the documentation process of the clinical reports, having a good practice of punctuality, familiarise with the use of technology, and six barriers; a limited number of electronic devices, the handover happened away from the patients, heavy workloads occur concomitantly, a lack of self-discipline coincide with the time for handover, and illegible writing skills and inappropriate documentation. It led to themes such as communication effectiveness and commitment to patient safety, teamwork and practices leading to continuity of care, and overcoming challenges while handover reports. Conclusion: Clinical handovers are a vital component of patient care, and they require effective communication and commitment to patient safety, teamwork, and practices, leading to continuity of care and overcoming challenges while handling reports. The administrators shall address the concerns raised by these nurses, as adhering to best practices can help reduce errors and improve the overall quality of care provided. © 2024 Asia Pacific Higher Learning Sdn Bhd., Lincoln University College. All rights reserved. Asia Pacific Higher Learning Sdn Bhd., Lincoln University College 22317007 English Article All Open Access; Gold Open Access |
author |
Ahayalimudin N.; Noh H.M.; Norazman N.Z.Z.; Subri N.S.; Akhlak S.M. |
spellingShingle |
Ahayalimudin N.; Noh H.M.; Norazman N.Z.Z.; Subri N.S.; Akhlak S.M. Clinical Handover among Nurses in an Emergency Setting: FacilitatorsandBarriers |
author_facet |
Ahayalimudin N.; Noh H.M.; Norazman N.Z.Z.; Subri N.S.; Akhlak S.M. |
author_sort |
Ahayalimudin N.; Noh H.M.; Norazman N.Z.Z.; Subri N.S.; Akhlak S.M. |
title |
Clinical Handover among Nurses in an Emergency Setting: FacilitatorsandBarriers |
title_short |
Clinical Handover among Nurses in an Emergency Setting: FacilitatorsandBarriers |
title_full |
Clinical Handover among Nurses in an Emergency Setting: FacilitatorsandBarriers |
title_fullStr |
Clinical Handover among Nurses in an Emergency Setting: FacilitatorsandBarriers |
title_full_unstemmed |
Clinical Handover among Nurses in an Emergency Setting: FacilitatorsandBarriers |
title_sort |
Clinical Handover among Nurses in an Emergency Setting: FacilitatorsandBarriers |
publishDate |
2024 |
container_title |
Malaysian Journal of Nursing |
container_volume |
16 |
container_issue |
2 |
doi_str_mv |
10.31674/MJN.2024.V16I02.001 |
url |
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85211121520&doi=10.31674%2fMJN.2024.V16I02.001&partnerID=40&md5=24afc2568ce490c574201ba55715f657 |
description |
Background: Clinical handover in emergency settings is a crucial and complex process involving transferring patient care responsibilities and information. Objective: It identified the facilitators and barriers to clinical handover among nurses in an emergency setting. Methods: This descriptive qualitative study involves fourteen nurses from the emergency department of a teaching hospital in the East Coast region of Malaysia. The data was collected from one-on-one interviews using a topic guide. Results: The study acknowledged seven facilitators: learning from various approaches, the information that needs to be relayed, the accuracy and precision of the information, the clinical handover at the bedside, the documentation process of the clinical reports, having a good practice of punctuality, familiarise with the use of technology, and six barriers; a limited number of electronic devices, the handover happened away from the patients, heavy workloads occur concomitantly, a lack of self-discipline coincide with the time for handover, and illegible writing skills and inappropriate documentation. It led to themes such as communication effectiveness and commitment to patient safety, teamwork and practices leading to continuity of care, and overcoming challenges while handover reports. Conclusion: Clinical handovers are a vital component of patient care, and they require effective communication and commitment to patient safety, teamwork, and practices, leading to continuity of care and overcoming challenges while handling reports. The administrators shall address the concerns raised by these nurses, as adhering to best practices can help reduce errors and improve the overall quality of care provided. © 2024 Asia Pacific Higher Learning Sdn Bhd., Lincoln University College. All rights reserved. |
publisher |
Asia Pacific Higher Learning Sdn Bhd., Lincoln University College |
issn |
22317007 |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
accesstype |
All Open Access; Gold Open Access |
record_format |
scopus |
collection |
Scopus |
_version_ |
1820775431750549504 |