Communication failures are a leading cause of medical errors during pediatric resuscitations. In high-stress situations, clear, structured, and assertive communication is essential to ensure team coordination, timely interventions, and optimal patient outcomes.
Closed-loop communication ensures that instructions are clearly received, understood, and executed:
Step | Example |
---|---|
Team Leader Gives a Clear Order | “Give Epinephrine 0.01 mg/kg IV now.” |
Team Member Repeats Back | “Epinephrine 0.01 mg/kg IV, on its way.” |
Leader Confirms Execution | “Thank you. Let me know when it’s in.” |
Use clear and concise language to reduce ambiguity:
Ineffective | Effective |
---|---|
“We need epinephrine!” | “Give 0.01 mg/kg epinephrine IV now.” |
“Start compressions.” | “Begin chest compressions at 100–120 per minute.” |
“What’s going on?” | “Heart rate is 50 bpm; prepare for atropine.” |
Call out significant findings so the team can respond quickly:
Step | Example |
---|---|
S = Situation | “We have a 4-year-old in cardiac arrest for 6 minutes.” |
B = Background | “Previously healthy, collapsed suddenly.” |
A = Assessment | “Received 2 doses of epinephrine, HR now 80 bpm.” |
R = Recommendation | “Continue monitoring and initiate post-ROSC care.” |
Error | Consequence | Solution |
---|---|---|
Vague commands | Delayed or incorrect care | Use specific, direct language |
Unconfirmed orders | Missed or duplicated treatments | Use closed-loop communication |
Quiet or hesitant speech | Missed instructions | Speak clearly and confidently |
Ignoring junior team input | Missed critical information | Encourage inclusive communication |
No debriefing | Missed opportunity to improve | Always review post-event |
Takeaway: Skilled resuscitation teams succeed not just with knowledge, but with communication. Precision, clarity, and teamwork save lives.