Technical Support
Log out
Skip to content
Verbal Handoff Assessment – Multiple
Home
Observations Landing Page
Verbal Handoff Assessment – Multiple
Verbal Handoff Assessment – Multiple
2017-03-02T15:42:46+00:00
Verbal Handoff Assessment (MULTIPLE patients)
"
*
" indicates required fields
Department or Specialty
*
Please Select the Appropriate Department or Specialty
Respiratory Therapy
Anesthesiology
Cardiology
Critical Care
Emergency Medicine
Gastroenterology
Hematology / Oncology
Infectious Disease
Internal Medicine
Neonatal Intensive Care
Nephrology
Neurology
Obstetrics & Gynecology
Orthopedics
Other
Otolaryngology
Pediatrics
Surgery
Subspecialty
*
Please Select the Appropriate Subspecialty
Respiratory Therapy
Anesthesiology
Bariatrics
Cardiology
Critical Care Intensivists
CRNA
CTV
Dialysis
Emergency Department
Emergency General Surgery
ENT Practice
EP/Cath/Vascular
General Surgery Practice
Hematology / Oncology
Hospitalists
Inpatient Rehab
Interventional Radiology
Infectious Disease
Neurosurgery
NICU
Neonatology
Neurology
OB-LDR
Ortho Hand Practice
Ortho Podiatry Practice
Ortho Trauma
Other
Pediatric
Pediatric GI
SOC
Trauma
Vascular Practice
Other Subspecialty
Provider Type of Individual Giving Handoff
*
Advance Practice Provider
Attending Physician
Respiratory Therapist
Other
Other Provider
Day of Week
*
Weekday
Weekend
Time of Day
*
AM
PM
Did the Handoff Occur at the Bedside?
*
Yes
No
Not Applicable
Estimate the Number of Interruptions that Occurred During the Observed Handoff Session
*
0 Interruptions
1 to 3 Interruptions
4 to 6 Interruptions
More Than 6 Interruptions
Please Estimate the Number of Patients Handed Off During the Observed Session
*
1 to 5 Patients
6 to 10 Patients
11 to 15 Patients
15 to 20 Patients
More Than 20 Patients
Verbal Handoff Assessment Tool-Multiple Patients
Indicate the frequency that each element of the mnemonic is present
*
Never
Rarely
Sometimes
Usually
Always
I. Illness Severity
P. Patient Summary
A. Action List
S. Situation Awareness/Contingency Planning
S. Synthesis by Receiver
I. Illness Severity: Identification as stables, "watcher", or unstable; must occur at the beginning of each patient handoff.
P. Patient Summary: Might include summary statement, events leading up to admission, hospital course, ongoing assessment, plan. A. Action list: To do list; (must be separated from patient summary). S. Situation Awareness/Contingency Planning: Know what’s going on; plan for what might happen. S. Synthesis by Receiver: Written reminder to prompt receiver to summarize what was heard during verbal handoff.
Indicate the frequency with which the following elements were present in the observed handoff:
*
Never
Rarely
Sometimes
Usually
Always
Giver actively engaged with receiver to ensure understanding of patients
Giver appropriately prioritized key information, concerns, or actions
To-do list restricted to items that need to be accomplished on next shift
High quality contingency plans with clear if/then format
Receiver provided a synthesis that summarized the key components of the handoff, rather than restating all information
(eg. encourages questions, asked questions, considers learning style of receiver)
Was an I-PASS Written Handoff Tool Used to Facilitate the Verbal Handoff Process?
Yes
No
How would you rate the overall quality of the written handoff tool?
Excellent – The tool is clear, complete, up to date, and highly useful for ensuring safe and effective handoffs
Good – The tool is generally clear, complete, and up to date, with minor areas for improvement
Fair – The tool has notable gaps or ambiguities that could impact safe and effective handoffs
Poor – The tool is unclear, incomplete, or lacks critical information needed for safe and effective handoffs
Not Applicable – A written handoff tool was not reviewed
Did you provide verbal feedback to the handoff team?
*
Yes
No
Share one REINFORCING piece of feedback based on your handoff observation
Share one CORRECTIVE piece of feedback based on your handoff observation
Observer Name
*
First
Last