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Published in: Critical Care 1/2016

Open Access 01-12-2016 | Research

The interplay between teamwork, clinicians’ emotional exhaustion, and clinician-rated patient safety: a longitudinal study

Authors: Annalena Welp, Laurenz L. Meier, Tanja Manser

Published in: Critical Care | Issue 1/2016

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Abstract

Background

Effectively managing patient safety and clinicians’ emotional exhaustion are important goals of healthcare organizations. Previous cross-sectional studies showed that teamwork is associated with both. However, causal relationships between all three constructs have not yet been investigated. Moreover, the role of different dimensions of teamwork in relation to emotional exhaustion and patient safety is unclear. The current study focused on the long-term development of teamwork, emotional exhaustion, and patient safety in interprofessional intensive care teams by exploring causal relationships between these constructs. A secondary objective was to disentangle the effects of interpersonal and cognitive-behavioral teamwork.

Methods

We employed a longitudinal study design. Participants were 2100 nurses and physicians working in 55 intensive care units. They answered an online questionnaire on interpersonal and cognitive-behavioral aspects of teamwork, emotional exhaustion, and patient safety at three time points with a 3-month lag. Data were analyzed with cross-lagged structural equation modeling. We controlled for professional role.

Results

Analyses showed that emotional exhaustion had a lagged effect on interpersonal teamwork. Furthermore, interpersonal and cognitive-behavioral teamwork mutually influenced each other. Finally, cognitive-behavioral teamwork predicted clinician-rated patient safety.

Conclusions

The current study shows that the interrelations between teamwork, clinician burnout, and clinician-rated patient safety unfold over time. Interpersonal and cognitive-behavioral teamwork play specific roles in a process leading from clinician emotional exhaustion to decreased clinician-rated patient safety. Emotionally exhausted clinicians are less able to engage in positive interpersonal teamwork, which might set in motion a vicious cycle: negative interpersonal team interactions negatively affect cognitive-behavioral teamwork and vice versa. Ultimately, ineffective cognitive-behavioral teamwork negatively impacts clinician-rated patient safety. Thus, reducing clinician emotional exhaustion is an important prerequisite of managing teamwork and patient safety. From a practical point of view, team-based interventions targeting patient safety are less likely to be effective when clinicians are emotionally exhausted.
Footnotes
1
The survey also included the depersonalization and personal accomplishment scales of the Maslach Burnout Inventory [24]. The number of relationships between variables defined in a clustered SEM is limited by the sample size at the unit level. Based on our core research aim of testing simultaneous interrelations and the results of a previous cross-sectional study, which showed that emotional exhaustion was the main predictor of both clinician-rated and objective indicators of patient safety, we opted to exclude the other burnout components in the main analyses to develop a meaningful and reliable statistical model [44].
 
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Metadata
Title
The interplay between teamwork, clinicians’ emotional exhaustion, and clinician-rated patient safety: a longitudinal study
Authors
Annalena Welp
Laurenz L. Meier
Tanja Manser
Publication date
01-12-2016
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Critical Care / Issue 1/2016
Electronic ISSN: 1364-8535
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-016-1282-9

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