Abstract

BackgroundTeam training interventions to improve team effectiveness within healthcare are widely used. However, in-depth knowledge of how healthcare professionals experience such team training curricula and their implementation processes, as well as how contextual factors impact implementation, is currently missing. The aim of this study is therefore to describe healthcare professionals’ experiences with the implementation of a longitudinal interprofessional team training program in a surgical ward.MethodsA descriptive design was applied based on qualitative semi-structured focus group interviews with 11 healthcare professionals. A convenience sample of physicians (n = 4), registered nurses (n = 4), and certified nursing assistants (n = 3) was divided into three professionally based focus groups, which were interviewed at three time intervals over a period of 1 year.InterventionThe validated and evidence-based team training program Team Strategies and Tools to Enhance Performance and Patient Safety (TeamSTEPPS) was implemented in a surgical ward at a hospital between January 2016 and June 2017. The team training program included three phases: 1) assessment and planning, 2) training and implementation, and 3) sustainment.ResultsHealthcare professionals’ experiences with the content of the team training program varied from valuing the different elements of it to seeing the challenges in implementing the elements in clinical practice. A one-day training course was found to be especially beneficial for interprofessional collaboration at the ward. Over time, the nursing staff seemed to maintain their motivation for the implementation of the tools and strategies, while the physicians became less actively involved. Contextual ward factors influenced the adoption and utilization of the tools and strategies of the program both positively and negatively. The healthcare professionals’ experienced the implementation of the team training program as positive for the patient safety culture at the ward in the forms of increased awareness of teamwork and open communication.ConclusionsThe study suggests that the implementation of a team training program in a surgical ward is dependent on a set of factors related to content, process, context, and impact. Knowledge on how and why a team training program work supports the transferability to clinical practice in further planning of team training measures.Trial registrationThe study is part of a larger research project with a study protocol that was registered retrospectively on 05.30.17, with the trial registration number ISRCTN13997367.

Highlights

  • Team training interventions to improve team effectiveness within healthcare are widely used

  • The study suggests that the implementation of a team training program in a surgical ward is dependent on a set of factors related to content, process, context, and impact

  • The content of the team training program The healthcare professionals reported many different experiences related to the content of the team training program, ranging from those that valued the different tools and strategies of the program to those that saw them as challenging and difficult to incorporate in daily clinical practice in the ward

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Summary

Introduction

Team training interventions to improve team effectiveness within healthcare are widely used. In-depth knowledge of how healthcare professionals experience such team training curricula and their implementation processes, as well as how contextual factors impact implementation, is currently missing. The aim of this study is to describe healthcare professionals’ experiences with the implementation of a longitudinal interprofessional team training program in a surgical ward. Interventions to improve team effectiveness within healthcare are widely used [1]. Team training is one such intervention that has been described by Hughes et al [2] as a learning strategy in which a group systematically acquires teamwork-related knowledge, skills, and abilities that impact the cognitions and behaviors of a team. Exploring how healthcare professionals experience team training curricula and implementation processes that apply qualitative methods is mainly missing. Cunningham et al [4] identified the following five contextual enablers for teams to be effective: (a) interprofessional focus and a flattened hierarchy, (b) effective communication, (c) leader support and the alignment of team goals with the organizational goals, (d) the credibility of the interventions, and (e) suitable team structure with physician involvement

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