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Factors Influencing Team Behaviors in Surgery: A Qualitative Study to Inform Teamwork Interventions

BACKGROUND: Surgical excellence demands teamwork. Poor team behaviors negatively affect team performance and are associated with adverse events and worse outcomes. Interventions to improve surgical teamwork focusing on frontline team members’ nontechnical skills have proliferated but shown mixed res...

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Autores principales: Aveling, Emma-Louise, Stone, Juliana, Sundt, Thoralf, Wright, Cameron, Gino, Francesca, Singer, Sara
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6021556/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29427618
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.athoracsur.2017.12.045
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author Aveling, Emma-Louise
Stone, Juliana
Sundt, Thoralf
Wright, Cameron
Gino, Francesca
Singer, Sara
author_facet Aveling, Emma-Louise
Stone, Juliana
Sundt, Thoralf
Wright, Cameron
Gino, Francesca
Singer, Sara
author_sort Aveling, Emma-Louise
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Surgical excellence demands teamwork. Poor team behaviors negatively affect team performance and are associated with adverse events and worse outcomes. Interventions to improve surgical teamwork focusing on frontline team members’ nontechnical skills have proliferated but shown mixed results. Literature on teamwork in organizations suggests that team behaviors are also contingent on psychosocial, cultural, and organizational factors. This study examined factors influencing surgical team behaviors to inform more contextually sensitive and effective approaches to optimizing surgical teamwork. METHODS: This qualitative study of cardiac surgical teams in a large United States teaching hospital included 34 semistructured interviews. Thematic network analysis was used to examine perceptions of ideal teamwork and factors influencing team behaviors in the operating room. RESULTS: Perceptions of ideal teamwork were largely shared, but team members held discrepant views of which team and leadership behaviors enhanced or undermined teamwork. Other factors affecting team behaviors were related to the local organizational culture, including management of staff behavior, variable case demands, and team members’ technical competence, and fitness of organizational structures and processes to support teamwork. These factors affected perceptions of what constituted optimal interpersonal and team behaviors in the operating room. CONCLUSIONS: Team behaviors are contextually contingent and organizationally determined, and beliefs about optimal behaviors are not necessarily shared. Interventions to optimize surgical teamwork require establishing consensus regarding best practice, ability to adapt as circumstances require, and organizational commitment to addressing contextual factors that affect teams.
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spelling pubmed-60215562018-07-01 Factors Influencing Team Behaviors in Surgery: A Qualitative Study to Inform Teamwork Interventions Aveling, Emma-Louise Stone, Juliana Sundt, Thoralf Wright, Cameron Gino, Francesca Singer, Sara Ann Thorac Surg Article BACKGROUND: Surgical excellence demands teamwork. Poor team behaviors negatively affect team performance and are associated with adverse events and worse outcomes. Interventions to improve surgical teamwork focusing on frontline team members’ nontechnical skills have proliferated but shown mixed results. Literature on teamwork in organizations suggests that team behaviors are also contingent on psychosocial, cultural, and organizational factors. This study examined factors influencing surgical team behaviors to inform more contextually sensitive and effective approaches to optimizing surgical teamwork. METHODS: This qualitative study of cardiac surgical teams in a large United States teaching hospital included 34 semistructured interviews. Thematic network analysis was used to examine perceptions of ideal teamwork and factors influencing team behaviors in the operating room. RESULTS: Perceptions of ideal teamwork were largely shared, but team members held discrepant views of which team and leadership behaviors enhanced or undermined teamwork. Other factors affecting team behaviors were related to the local organizational culture, including management of staff behavior, variable case demands, and team members’ technical competence, and fitness of organizational structures and processes to support teamwork. These factors affected perceptions of what constituted optimal interpersonal and team behaviors in the operating room. CONCLUSIONS: Team behaviors are contextually contingent and organizationally determined, and beliefs about optimal behaviors are not necessarily shared. Interventions to optimize surgical teamwork require establishing consensus regarding best practice, ability to adapt as circumstances require, and organizational commitment to addressing contextual factors that affect teams. Elsevier 2018-07 /pmc/articles/PMC6021556/ /pubmed/29427618 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.athoracsur.2017.12.045 Text en © 2018 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons. Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
spellingShingle Article
Aveling, Emma-Louise
Stone, Juliana
Sundt, Thoralf
Wright, Cameron
Gino, Francesca
Singer, Sara
Factors Influencing Team Behaviors in Surgery: A Qualitative Study to Inform Teamwork Interventions
title Factors Influencing Team Behaviors in Surgery: A Qualitative Study to Inform Teamwork Interventions
title_full Factors Influencing Team Behaviors in Surgery: A Qualitative Study to Inform Teamwork Interventions
title_fullStr Factors Influencing Team Behaviors in Surgery: A Qualitative Study to Inform Teamwork Interventions
title_full_unstemmed Factors Influencing Team Behaviors in Surgery: A Qualitative Study to Inform Teamwork Interventions
title_short Factors Influencing Team Behaviors in Surgery: A Qualitative Study to Inform Teamwork Interventions
title_sort factors influencing team behaviors in surgery: a qualitative study to inform teamwork interventions
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6021556/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29427618
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.athoracsur.2017.12.045
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