( Anesth Analg . 2025;141:464-466. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000007422.) The editorial explores the effectiveness, implementation challenges, and psychological underpinnings of using mnemonics and checklists in perioperative patient handoffs. It discusses systematic review of the topic by Patel et al (above), which analyzed studies involving distinct handoff mnemonics, primarily acronyms such as SBAR (Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendation). These tools aim to improve communication and, ultimately, patient outcomes. However, only 4 studies in review by Patel et al measured patient outcomes, none of which showed significant improvement. Most studies instead focused on process measures such as compliance and information transfer, with 63% reporting at least one notable enhancement in these areas. Despite these gains, many implementations relied on brief training sessions that were neither reinforced nor integrated into broader systemic redesigns, a key limitation, since education alone rarely leads to sustainable safety improvements in complex health care environments.
Webster et al. (Sun,) studied this question.