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Perceived Barriers to Rapid Response Team Activation Among Nurses

Madison Tilley, Kathleen Walsh Spencer

2020AJN American Journal of Nursing31 citationsDOI

Abstract

The purpose of this literature review was to investigate the major barriers nurses face when it is necessary to seek additional assistance and resources by calling the rapid response team (RRT) in order to manage and stabilize a clinically deteriorating patient. A total of 40 articles were reviewed. Eight barriers were identified as having an impact on RRT activation, either causing a delay in activation time or preventing activation altogether: a lack of consistent RRT education among nurses, the established hierarchy in the hospital, an uncertainty about when to call the RRT if clinical deterioration is subtle or gradual rather than abrupt, a perceived need to justify a decision to call the RRT, the increased workload for both the ICU nurse and the medical-surgical nurse, negative past experiences with RRTs, an unsupportive unit culture, and less nursing experience. Suggestions for overcoming these barriers include RRT education for nurses and physicians in addition to fostering a supportive unit culture.

Topics & Concepts

Rapid response teamWorkloadNursingMedicineUnit (ring theory)PsychologyMedical emergencyComputer scienceOperating systemMathematics educationSepsis Diagnosis and TreatmentIntensive Care Unit Cognitive DisordersFamily and Patient Care in Intensive Care Units
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