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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 6/2017

01-06-2017 | Original Research

Exploring Physician Perspectives of Residency Holdover Handoffs: A Qualitative Study to Understand an Increasingly Important Type of Handoff

Authors: Jonathan A. Duong, MD, Trevor P. Jensen, MD MS, Sasha Morduchowicz, BA, Michelle Mourad, MD, James D. Harrison, MPH PhD, Sumant R. Ranji, MD

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 6/2017

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Abstract

Background

The term “holdover admissions” refers to patients admitted by an overnight physician and whose care is then transferred to a new primary team the next morning. Descriptions of the holdover process in internal medicine are sparse.

Objective

To identify important factors affecting the quality of holdover handoffs at an internal medicine (IM) residency program and to compare them to previously identified factors for other handoffs.

Design

We undertook a qualitative study using structured focus groups and interviews. We analyzed data using qualitative content analysis.

Participants

IM residents, IM program directors, and hospitalists at a large academic medical center.

Main Measures

A nine-question open-ended interview guide.

Key Results

We identified 13 factors describing holdover handoffs. Five factors—physical space, standardization, task accountability, closed-loop verification, and resilience—were similar to those described in prior handoff literature in other specialties. Eight factors were new concepts that may uniquely affect the quality of the holdover handoff in IM. These included electronic health record access, redundancy, unwritten thoughts, different clinician needs, diagnostic uncertainty, anchoring, teaching, and feedback. These factors were organized into five overarching themes: physical environment, information transfer, responsibility, clinical reasoning, and education.

Conclusions

The holdover handoff in IM is complex and has unique considerations for achieving high quality. Further exploration of safe, efficient, and educational holdover handoff practices is necessary.
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Metadata
Title
Exploring Physician Perspectives of Residency Holdover Handoffs: A Qualitative Study to Understand an Increasingly Important Type of Handoff
Authors
Jonathan A. Duong, MD
Trevor P. Jensen, MD MS
Sasha Morduchowicz, BA
Michelle Mourad, MD
James D. Harrison, MPH PhD
Sumant R. Ranji, MD
Publication date
01-06-2017
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 6/2017
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-017-4009-y

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