Published in:
01-06-2015 | Editorials
Using qualitative and mixed methodologies to explore hierarchy in the operating room
Author:
Anne Wong, MD, PhD
Published in:
Canadian Journal of Anesthesia/Journal canadien d'anesthésie
|
Issue 6/2015
Login to get access
Excerpt
In this issue of the
Journal, Bould
et al.
1 report on the findings of an intriguing mixed methods study that investigates the phenomenon of hierarchy in the operating room setting and its effect on decision-making. In this study, a simulated intraoperative crisis scenario was created in which resident participants were ordered by a faculty anesthesiologist (whom they had not previously met) to transfuse a Jehovah’s Witness patient contrary to the patient’s explicit written order. This scenario took place in either a “high” or a “low hierarchy” operating room environment where scripted interactions between team members were either formal and impersonal or informal and friendly. The simulations were video recorded, and the behaviours of the residents in challenging the order to transfuse were rated using the modified Advocacy Inquiry Scale (mAIS).
2 The results of this quantitative component of their study had been previously reported.
2 …