Cooperation and conflict in intra‐hospital transfers: A qualitative analysis

Abstract Aim The purpose of this study was to explore the latent conditions of cooperation and conflict in intra‐hospital patient transfers (i.e. transfers of patients between units in a hospital). Design Secondary qualitative analysis of 28 interviews conducted with 29 hospital staff, including phy...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hayley D. Germack (Author), Renee Fekieta (Author), Meredith Campbell Britton (Author), Shelli L. Feder (Author), Alana Rosenberg (Author), Sarwat I. Chaudhry (Author)
Format: Book
Published: Wiley, 2020-03-01T00:00:00Z.
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Summary:Abstract Aim The purpose of this study was to explore the latent conditions of cooperation and conflict in intra‐hospital patient transfers (i.e. transfers of patients between units in a hospital). Design Secondary qualitative analysis of 28 interviews conducted with 29 hospital staff, including physicians (N = 13), nurses (N = 10) and support staff (N = 6) from a single, large academic tertiary hospital in the Northeastern United States. Methods A two‐member multidisciplinary team applied a directed content analysis approach to data collected from semi‐structured interviews. Results Three recurrent themes were generated: (a) patient flow policies created imbalances of power; (b) relationships were helpful to facilitate safe transfers; and (c) method of admission order communication was a source of disagreement. Hospital quality improvement efforts could benefit from a teaming approach to minimize unintentional power imbalances and optimize communicative relationships between units.
Item Description:2054-1058
10.1002/nop2.434