Healthcare organizations, in reviewing care delivery opportunities and providing feedback to staff, often focus on what went wrong, but a new study suggests that reversing this perspective may help organizations improve their work culture by understanding what went right. A team of Mass General Brigham researchers analyzed peer-to-peer positive feedback, systematically collected when caring for a dying patient as part of a mandatory mortality review process. They found that standardized collection and sharing of positive feedback — what went right — is a feasible way to increase mutual appreciation among health care workers and to provide valuable information to leadership on the hospital’s culture of teamwork, collegiality, and civility. The study is published in The Journal of General Internal Medicine.
Credit: Brigham and Women’s Hospital
Healthcare organizations, in reviewing care delivery opportunities and providing feedback to staff, often focus on what went wrong, but a new study suggests that reversing this perspective may help organizations improve their work culture by understanding what went right. A team of Mass General Brigham researchers analyzed peer-to-peer positive feedback, systematically collected when caring for a dying patient as part of a mandatory mortality review process. They found that standardized collection and sharing of positive feedback — what went right — is a feasible way to increase mutual appreciation among health care workers and to provide valuable information to leadership on the hospital’s culture of teamwork, collegiality, and civility. The study is published in The Journal of General Internal Medicine.
Researchers analyzed survey responses from 388 physicians, 212 nurses, 64 advanced practice providers and 1 respiratory therapist at four Mass General Brigham hospitals. Healthcare workers provided positive feedback to their peers about 1) exceptional patient and family-centered care; 2) a provider’s expertise and composure; and 3) empathic peer support and effective team collaboration.
Analysis of positive feedback shows clear patterns of feedback across specialties. The positive feedback in medicine, neurology, hospice/palliative care, and surgery focused on patient care while, within emergency medicine, the focus was on expertise and composure. Most positive feedback acknowledged specific individuals, and nurses provided the most feedback across roles compared to other clinician types. Study limitations include limited generalizability since the study occurred at a single health system and not collecting outcome data on adverse events, operational efficiency, or clinician wellbeing or attrition— all of which need to be examined longitudinally in different clinical contexts.
“Our study provides rich, qualitative data that highlight the amazing work that our clinicians provide on a daily basis,” said first author Isaac Chua, MD, MPH, a palliative care physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “Systematic collection and sharing of positive feedback is a grassroots, low-cost intervention that can help health care leadership understand and improve workplace culture based on the value system of its employees. Receiving and sharing this feedback may also help health care workers feel more valued at work, which may protect them against burnout and attrition.”
“Every day, we review and learn from safety reporting and mortality reviews on how to improve patient care as well as scale best practices,” said Mallika L Mendu MD, MBA, vice president of Clinical Operations and Care Continuum at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “It is time for us to systematically learn from positive feedback provided by and about our frontline staff. Our study provides foundational knowledge of how to develop a systematic tool and share data with frontline staff as well as organizational leaders to foster improved culture.”
Authorship: Other Mass General Brigham authors include Matthew Wien (Brigham and Women’s Hospital), Stuart Lipsitz (Brigham and Women’s Hospital), Yvonne Y. Cheung (Newton-Wellesley Hospital), Elizabeth A. Mort (Massachusetts General Hospital), Sonali Desai (Brigham and Women’s Hospital), Madelyn Pearson ((Brigham and Women’s Hospital), Charles A. Morris (Brigham and Women’s Hospital) and Ronen Rozenblum (Brigham and Women’s Hospital). Other authors include Roaa M. Khinkar, Michaela Kerrissey, and Sunil Eappen.
Disclosures: Dr. Chua reports receiving a grant from the National Institute on Aging during the conduct of the study that is unrelated to this work. Dr. Rozenblum reports having equity in Hospitech Respiration, equity from TRI-O, equity from AEYE Health, equity from RxE2, and equity from OtheReality; all of which are unrelated to this work. He is also receiving research funding from Boston Scientific Corporation, Telem, Calosense Health, Breath of Health, Merative, and Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute; all of which are unrelated to this work.
Paper cited: Chua IS et al. “What Went Right? A Mixed‑Methods Study of Positive Feedback Data in a Hospital‑Wide Mortality Review Survey” Journal of General Internal Medicine DOI: 10.1007/s11606-023-08393-z
Journal
Journal of General Internal Medicine
DOI
10.1007/s11606-023-08393-z
Method of Research
Observational study
Subject of Research
People
Article Title
What Went Right? A Mixed‑Methods Study of Positive Feedback Data in a Hospital‑Wide Mortality Review Survey
Article Publication Date
18-Sep-2023
COI Statement
Dr. Chua reports receiving a grant from the National Institute on Aging during the conduct of the study that is unrelated to this work. Dr. Rozenblum reports having equity in Hospitech Respiration, equity from TRI-O, equity from AEYE Health, equity from RxE2, and equity from OtheReality; all of which are unrelated to this work. He is also receiving research funding from Boston Scientific Corporation, Telem, Calosense Health, Breath of Health, Merative, and Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute; all of which are unrelated to this work.