How Did We Get Here? Creating and Sustaining Supportive Team Environments

During Neonatal Nurses Week, not only should we be focused on the outstanding work of our neonatal nursing colleagues, but how can we promote collaborative teamwork that undergirds outstanding neonatal care? How can we best support our nursing teams in caring for the smallest and most fragile of patients?

Posted under: Other, Quality of Care

During this Neonatal Nurses Week, not only should we be focused on the outstanding work of our neonatal nursing colleagues, but how can we promote collaborative teamwork that undergirds outstanding neonatal care? Sometimes it is easier said than done, but one thing is sure: committing to and caring for our patients AND each other, should be our rallying cry.

Unfortunately, the news cycle of late has been rife with discussions of patient harm resulting from communication challenges and failures within teams:
  • April Valentine: Young woman who died while in labor. Nurses reported they could not call the doctor as they would “cuss them out.”

  • Lucy Letby: NICU nurse in the UK found guilty of murdering seven babies in a neonatal unit and convicted of trying to kill six others. Physicians and others came forward with their concerns, only to be told to “apologize to Lucy” for impugning her of wrongdoing.
As this is Neonatal Nurses Week, I thought I would briefly explore chain-of-command opportunities in the NICU. How can we best support our nursing teams in caring for the smallest and most fragile of patients? Instead, I found a litany of information related to bullying…nurse/nurse, nurse/physician, physician/physician. And I must say, I was not expecting that. While the majority of my work of late has been to support communication challenges in the obstetric setting, perhaps we should also focus on the NICU environment.

Committing to and caring for others, including each other, should be our rallying cry.

Here are two NICU examples I thought I would share, one from a nurse and one from a physician:

Nurse:
“Guess who just got bullied out of their new NICU job? It’s me. This is the most catty, cliquey, TOXIC work environment I have ever seen. I have been yanked off of orientation, belittled, completely unsupported, and now my preceptor says I need to ‘rethink if this is really for me.’ Like…. I have 4+ years of experience, have worked COVID ICU, charged, precepted, been asked to be House Sup…. I know I’m not dumb. But [gosh], they made me feel small. Anyone else go through this? Feeling pretty alone and discouraged right now. Luckily a past job is taking me back and I’m getting out of here.”

Physician:
“The presence of incivility is not new to medicine, and certainly not foreign to us in the NICU environment. Over the past two decades, I have seen several situations develop in different institutions that create an environment where it is uncomfortable, threatening, or unsafe to conduct oneself fluidly as part of a highly functioning team. Incivility can arise simply from people choosing to disregard or disrespect one another’s opinions, or it can manifest more blatantly in the form of harsh public criticism or the deliberate dissemination of misinformation that deteriorates trust levels.” https://www.medela.us/breastfeeding-professionals/blog/going-toxic-in-the-nicu-dealing-with-workplace-negativity

Think about that. Deliberate dissemination of misinformation. Deteriorating trust levels? The question is so timely…how did we get here?

And as I thought about this more, I kept coming back to the patient safety bundles developed by the Alliance for Innovation on Maternal Health (AIM). The 5 Rs, (readiness, recognition, response, reporting/systems learning/respectful interactions) create a consistent and standardized approach to improving patient care. And may even support team synergy and col
But what if there were a Team Communication Patient Care Bundle? What would that look like? How can we establish consistent, standardized ways of meaningful teamwork, enhancing communication, and improving patient outcomes?

So, the real question should be “where do we go from here?” and “How can we work collaboratively to create the best environment for patients AND our teams?”

Here is a start. I hope you will help me finish it.

Readiness
Every hospital Board/Trustees:
  • As part of Governance, routinely assess work environment/psychological safety and establish metrics to evaluate hospital leadership.
  • Expectations of transparency related to patient harm resulting from communication failures.
  • Understand the scope of Directors and Officers Insurance Liability (D & O)/General Liability (GL) in the event of serious maternal/neonatal harm/death that was the direct result of a documented/known team communication challenge (incivility/bullying/intimidation).
  • Yearly Board assessment that includes organizational psychological safety metrics.
Every hospital
  • Establish parameters, expectations, and accountabilities for team communication and share documents and reports openly.
  • Establish a definition of incivility/bullying/intimidation and hold all employees accountable to expectations.
  • Assess psychological safety within units and share findings with all team members, including between/within disciplines.
  • Establish a centralized and representative team to evaluate serious maternal/neonatal harm stemming from potential/real communication failures.
  • Train staff on team communication skills annually/per policy (TeamSTEPPS as an example).
  • Establish a chain-of-command system that is developed and agreed upon by all stakeholders and broadly communicates plans for escalation, including real-time communication tracking.

Recognition and Prevention
Every Unit
  • Provide ongoing education to all team members related to communication expectations and accountability.
  • As a team, identify high-risk and high-stress situations that may facilitate communication challenges.
  • Use simulation as a guide and teaching tool for critical conversations.
  • Collaborative physician/provide/nursing leadership that role models teamwork and open communication style.

Response
Every Unit
  • In the event of a serious communication failure, stabilize the patient as needed/supportive care for the impacted staff member(s).
  • Use a standard, facility-wide reporting system for potential/real patient care challenges related to team communication.
  • Establish a rapid response team/process that can be available to any unit to support communication challenges within patient care.
  • Consistent and equitable actions for behaviors/interactions requiring intervention.
  • Use of Employee Assistance Program (EAP) for support/counseling within serious communication failures/patient events.

Reporting and Systems Learning
Every unit
  • Celebrate improvements in team cohesion and communication at every opportunity.
  • Perform multidisciplinary reviews of any patient care errors that may be the result of team communication failures.
  • Monitor rate of event reports related to team communication issues/errors/failures.

Respectful, Equitable, and Supportive Team Cohesion
Every unit
  • Assess for and act upon real/perceived team communication challenges based on bias, discrimination, or racism.
  • Establish debriefing process for patient harm as a result of communication failures.
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Restoration of Black Autonomy and Joy in Perinatal Nursing Leadership

There is an important intersection between Black women and birthing people, Black perinatal nursing leaders, and maternal health.

Posted under: Maternal Health, Quality of Care, Social Determinants of Health/Disparities

Six years ago, the Black Mamas Matter Alliance launched Black Maternal Health Week, a week each April that would highlight and amplify the unacceptable and sustained increase in Black maternal deaths . Within the global COVID-19 pandemic, the outcome disparities within Black and Brown maternal health communities continued to grow and were impacted at greater rates. On April 13, 2022, Vice President Kamala Harris convened Cabinet secretaries to address the ongoing maternal morbidity and mortality crisis in the United States. The President’s FY23 budget included $470 million to address additional maternal disparities projects, including supporting the perinatal health workforce.

The perinatal health workforce has become an important discussion point, as the need for community health workers, doulas, and other Black maternal health advocates center conversations about the needs of Black mothers and parents. While there is a significant need for a community health focus, inpatient obstetric care requires intentional focus and strong leadership. As reported by the CDC and MMRIA report, 13% of maternal deaths occur on the day of delivery. Inpatient obstetric teams require experienced nursing leadership to support the infrastructure and care delivery required to provide high quality, respectful, and culturally competent care. Open nursing leadership positions within Women’s and Children’s service lines that were once rarely available or open now sit vacant for weeks, and in some cases, months. An area of healthcare leadership that is not often studied is that of frontline perinatal nursing leaders.

So how does this connect to Black Maternal Health Week? There is an important intersection between Black women and birthing people, Black perinatal nursing leaders, and maternal health.

Weeks ago, Synova Associates and the National Perinatal Information Center launched a white paper that reported on the effects of chronic stress on perinatal nursing leaders (Supporting Perinatal and Neonatal Nurse Leaders: Identification and Moderation of Chronic Stress, IRB #1321780). These nursing leaders represented inpatient settings throughout the United States such as neonatal intensive care (NICU), labor and delivery, postpartum, well-baby nurseries, lactation services, antepartum, and those nursing leaders who are responsible for multiple units. The findings of this study revealed significant racial disparities in many areas, including turnover intent (p < .001), job control (p < .001) and organizational constraints (p < .001).

Based on the results of this study, the following recommendations are suggested for hospital leadership to address:
  1. Healthcare leaders and communities must be made aware of the extrinsic stressors that exist for Black/African American and diverse perinatal nursing leaders. Within this study population, stressors were described as physical symptoms (chest pain, shortness of breath, p < .001) that cannot be ignored, and require additional research and development for strategies by and for those most impacted by these findings. We cannot discuss the physical impacts upon Black nursing leaders without recognizing racism and structural barriers that create environments that impact physical health.

  2. Turnover intention, particularly as described in this study (“I won’t be working here one year from now” p < .001) for Black and Brown perinatal nursing leaders must be more thoroughly explored, and the urgency of this finding addressed. It will be important to replicate this study within other service lines to establish if these findings are unique to perinatal services, or if these findings are more global to diverse nursing leaders regardless of setting.

  3. Job Control, or the perceived ability to make decisions or the freedom to decide how to work, was also significantly decreased for Black and Brown nursing leaders (p < .001). In addition, organizational constraints (hospital rules/procedures; adequate help from others) was also significant (p < .001), which continues to generate further need for examining systems and structures in place that create these real and/or perceived barriers to effective leadership. Exploring these differences is critical and may aid in better understanding turnover intent as well as the symptoms of chronic stress described within Black perinatal nurse leaders. #structuralbarriers
During Black Maternal Health Week, it is important to center the conversation around Black women and birthing people and the continued unacceptable outcome disparities that exist despite data saturation. While assuring the health, well-being, and bodily autonomy of our diverse patients and communities continues to be a priority in our healthcare systems, it is just as important to ensure that we are providing that same level of effort and intensity at assuring the health and well-being of Black nursing leaders within our systems. During Black Maternal Health Week this year, celebrate the richness and diversity of Black communities and Black perinatal leaders. Support the Black Mamas Matter Alliance and the Restoration of Black Autonomy and Joy. Commit ourselves to amplifying Black voices and experiences and follow their lead for innovative and sustainable solutions to eradicating Black maternal morbidity and mortality.


References
National Minority Health Month. NIMHD. Accessed April 9, 2022. https://www.nimhd.nih.gov/programs/edu-training/nmhm/

Black Maternal Health Week. Black Mamas Matter Alliance. Accessed April 9, 2022. https://blackmamasmatter.org/bmhw/

Trocado V, Silvestre-Machado J, Azevedo L, Miranda A, Nogueira-Silva C. Pregnancy and COVID-19: a systematic review of maternal, obstetric and neonatal outcomes. The Journal of Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Medicine. 2020;0(0):1-13. doi:10.1080/14767058.2020.1781809

Di Mascio D, Khalil A, Saccone G, et al. Outcome of coronavirus spectrum infections (SARS, MERS, COVID-19) during pregnancy: a systematic review and meta-analysis. American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology MFM. 2020;2(2, Supplement):100107. doi:10.1016/j.ajogmf.2020.100107
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