BACKGROUND: Clinical debriefing is a key strategy to promote iterative team adaptation and Safety-II learning (from successes, failures, and performance variation). OBJECTIVES: To explore changes in communication behaviors after implementation of the TALK framework for voluntary team self-debriefing. METHODS: A 12-month, single-center interventional study in critical care at a university hospital. Data were collected on debriefing frequency, use of structured debriefing, perceived barriers, and the nature of improvement actions resulting from debriefing episodes. RESULTS: At baseline, 45.4% of the 653 shift teams reported considering debriefing; after the intervention, 65.4% to 95.0% of teams did so. A mean of 7.2 debriefings per week were completed. The gap between consideration and completion widened significantly, primarily due to the perception of having "no issues to discuss." Use of structured debriefing and the TALK framework increased from 0% to 100%. Concurrently, reporting of barriers to debriefing declined from 25% at baseline to 0% at 12 months. CONCLUSIONS: Voluntary, spontaneous team self-debriefing occurred more often than previously reported. Introduction of the TALK framework led to substantial reductions in barriers to reflective conversations, a 3-fold increase in structured debriefings, and greater team-driven engagement in improvement. As consideration of debriefing increased, so did the "intention-behavior gap," largely due to a lack of identified issues to discuss, highlighting the need for targeted strategies to promote Safety-II learning.
Enjo-Perez et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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