Showing posts with label laboratory technologists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label laboratory technologists. Show all posts

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Stand by Me - Musings on conflict between TM professionals

Last updated: 30 Mar. 2014
This blog muses on conflict between health professionals in transfusion medicine (TM) and how to facilitate interdisciplinary teamwork. Given the holiday season, teamwork and ways to promote harmony seem fitting topics. For example, last year's December blog was titled "Let's get together and feel all right" after Bob Marley's classic, One Love.

This month's title comes from a coming-of-age movie with a great soundtrack and a song with the same name - Stand By Me.

Recent events in my home province of Alberta got me to thinking about interdisciplinary teamwork and communication in TM.

In brief, Alberta appears to be in the midst of another experiment in improving patient care or finding ways to save money, depending on your perspective. It's another because we went through something similar with "health care restructuring" in the 1990s.


This time the new 'powers that be' are promoting radical change' in who does what. Probably they want to allocate tasks to the lowest paid worker rather than rationalize who can best perform specific patient care tasks and create exemplary health care teams, but time will tell.

In Canada there is a current controversy surrounding physician assistants (added 22 Jan. 2010). Nurses oppose Ontario government's physician assistant role citing inadequate education, concerns over patient safety and unnecessary costs: 
In recent years, much ink and lip service has been devoted to promoting interdisciplinary teamwork but I wonder how much occurs overall, and in TM in particular, and how effective it is. Some of the issues are discussed in TraQ's Case O-6:
This paper cited in Case O-6 discusses physician / nurse tensions:
This resource from O-6 presents the case of an intern unable to accept advice from an experienced pharmacist:

  • Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. One dose, 50 pills (Morbidity and Mortality Rounds on the Web)
As well, recently collegues and I have discussed INTD 410, an interdisciplinary course required of all health discipline students at the University of Alberta. As it happens, nursing students take the course later in their programs than medical students and inter-professional tensions occasionally arise, e.g., more experienced nursing students sometimes are tempted to 'gang up' on first year medical students, perhaps to retaliate for perceived or real slights on the wards or perhaps due to assimilating a culture of rivalry.

CLINICIANS vs TM LABORATORY
Over the years I have experienced, firsthand, both minor bickering and significant conflict between clinical staff (nurses and doctors) and technologists in the TM laboratory and continue to hear such anecdotes secondhand. For example, a common anecdote involves physicians (or nurses) being incredibly rude and dictatorial to lab staff who try to uphold safety standards related to patient specimen identity.

My take on this particular scenario is that the front line clinicians are likely under considerable stress treating a badly bleeding patient before their eyes and perceive the lab's "rules" as threatening the patient's life rather than being meant to save it. And it does not help if the laboratory technologist's communication of the issue appears to challenge the clinician's judgement since challenges to authority and competence are seldom viewed favorably by any health professional. Having the technologist be obsequious may be the response that the physician wants but it is not conducive to patient safety.
I briefly discussed tips for how to deal with conflict in this short article written for TraQ years ago:
Effective communication is fundamental to preventing professionals conflicts but a key cause of such conflict is the inability of each professional to appreciate the other's perspective and the realities of each work environment.

MUSINGS
The issues are complex, too complex to discuss fully in this blog. Nonetheless, below is food for thought on small ways to start to talk to each other, not at or past each other.


Educational initiatives such as the U of A's INTD 410 course and others can help. Obviously for health professionals to work as a team, they must train as a team.
Collaborative care means collaborative training

Education for interdisciplinary healthcare teams (from TraQ's Case O-6)
But what about those of us who never trained as part of a team and indeed grew up in a family where "we understood the professions as a conventional nuclear family, with doctor-father, nurse-mother, and patient-child"? (Savage & Smith)
As an aside, where do laboratory staff and other so-called "allied health professionals" fit in this cozy nuclear family of yore? Poor country cousins? Backward children kept in the basement and out-of-sight?  
Unseen servants who slave away but are seldom acknowledged even with eye contact, much as cleaning and kitchen staff are in today's hospitals or the homeless on our streets? I'll stop but you get the idea.
For those of us who trained and perhaps still work in such an anachronistic climate, and for educational programs without formal interdisciplinary courses, below are proffered suggestions for baby steps to help our sometimes dysfunctional family.

TECHNOLOGISTS / MEDICAL LABORATORY SCIENTISTS
For facilities with clinical internships, have students spend time shadowing knowledgeable and experienced nurses who administer transfusions. For example, this is done in the TM clinical rotation of MLS students, U of A where the transfusion safety officer happens to be a nurse who is also an MLS graduate.

For hospitals with or without interning technologists, have all lab staff do the same on a rotating basis. In this way, laboratory staff are exposed firsthand to the realities faced by nurses and staff get to know each other as individuals.

CLINICIANS
Medical students
As part of the often scant exposure to TM received by all medical students, transfusion service laboratories in teaching hospitals can facilitate exposure to the TM laboratory and its staff. This can be done in simple ways, e.g., at the U of A all first year medical and dental students participate in multiple, concurrent group seminars in which transfusion-related cases with TM laboratory data figure prominently.

To facilitate the many students involved, approximately two dozen volunteer facilitators are provided with notes and key learning points and supervise the cases. Besides hematopathologists and hematopathology residents, facilitators also include experienced medical laboratory technologists from the region's blood centre and hospital transfusion services.

Another positive baby step would be for TM-related cases at grand rounds to include components presented by medical laboratory technologists, nurses, and pharmacists, as appropriate.

It's in small ways such as this that interdisciplinary respect has the chance to develop.

Nurses
As for med students above, nursing students can benefit from clinically relevant lab-focused presentations involving laboratory staff as instructors and facilitators. As well, providing nurses with structured exposures* to the TS lab both during their training and afterwards could serve as the equivalent of technologists shadowing nurse transfusionists.

[* for example, experiences that stress patient and donor blood identity and the consequences of misidentification and how easily it can occur; importance of maintaining blood components in a temperature-controlled environment, etc.]
In Canada increased direct contact between nurses and technologists is facilitated via provincial blood coordinating offices and a network of regional transfusion safety officers, whose numbers include both nurses and technologists.

It's an encouraging sign of the times that the current President of the Canadian Society for Transfusion Medicine is a registered nurse.

BOTTOM LINE
Conflict is bound to occur in a work environment involving life and death. It is not a major issue in TM but nevertheless exists. Much remains to be done to break down the mental silos in which TM professionals often work and that sometimes contribute to conflict. Even small steps can help.


Like everything in life, it's hard to demonize someone you can put a face to, have learned something from, and have chatted with in a collegial atmosphere.

As the song from the movie of the same name goes,
Only then can we truly become the Champions of the Transfusion World. (grin)

As always, the views are mine alone. Comments are most welcome.

Monday, August 18, 2008

I can't get no satisfaction

The Rolling Stone's biggest hit from 1965 was "I can't get no satisfaction".

Over 40 years later the song comes to mind when reading about pathology errors in Canada that have eroded public confidence. Although about Canada, the events and resulting news coverage should resonate in many countries.

Chorneyko K, Butany J. Canada's pathology. (editorial) CMAJ 2008 Jun 3;178 1523

The authors, one of whom is the president of the Canadian Association of Pathologists (Butany), acknowledge that "Canadian laboratories are not unique in facing workload and human-resource issues or problems pertaining to medical error and patient safety" and then note that Canada lacks a national quality assurance (QA) program such as the College of American Pathologists in the USA and similar organizations in the UK and Australia.

Unfortunately, they mention only Ontario and BC as having laboratory accreditation and proficiency testing programs, when other provincial programs exist, including what is arguably the longest functioning and very effective QA / proficiency testing program of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta,
including an excellent program for transfusion medicine.

Related news items that subsequently appeared include

This article begins, A horrendous series of blunders at a Newfoundland medical laboratory has raised a frightening thought: What if similar problems exist at other facilities across the country?
Several stories in national papers have erroneously reported that only Ontario and British Columbia have regulatory bodies with authority over medical laboratories, e,g.,
The National Post reports that the Canadian Association of Pathologists has called for a national diagnostic checklist to include test validation, staff training, competency assessment, standardization of operating procedures and equipment maintenance. These measures have been standard practice in transfusion and other clinical laboratories for years.

The news coverage creates the impression that Canadian labs put the public at grave risk.

To date some pathologists and laboratorians have commented:

Swaine, et al. point out that in Alberta laboratory accreditation and proficiency testing programs have existed since the 1960s and are administered by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta.

These authors focus on clinical pathology and the need to fund and resource laboratories adequately.

VISIBILITY AND STATUS OF PATHOLOGY and LABORATORY MEDICINE

Laboratory technologists / clinical laboratory scientists / biomedical scientists constitute the 3rd largest group of health care workers, yet lab medicine as a career has long suffered from

  • low salaries (typically much less than nurses, which have a higher visibility)
  • limited upward mobility
  • poor understanding of the profession by the public and other health professionals
For example, most patient exposure to the lab is via blood collection. Few know that lab workers are well educated and skilled professionals who operate sophisticated equipment, problem solve, and work with physicians to help to diagnose illness. See

I have heard pathologists say that they too are often under-recognized and near the bottom of the respect ladder in medicine making recruitment difficult. For example, see


BOTTOM LINESerious pathology-related errors occurred, indicating a problem. The concept of a national body developing laboratory quality standards has merit, so long as any new program integrates with existing provincial programs and does not create another layer of bureaucratic regulation. All provinces need to develop functioning accreditation programs and existing provincial systems can be improved - hence the concept of continuous quality improvement.

However, the overall notion that Canada's clinical laboratories are uncontrolled back-waters of laboratory medicine that generate test results of poor quality is wrong. Additionally, headlines implying incompetence do not help desperately needed recruitment and undermine the professional pride and status of pathologists and laboratorians.

"I can't get no satisfaction" from the pathology lab errors in Newfoundland and Labrador, which likely led to incorrect treatments for almost 400 breast cancer patients.

"I can't get no satisfaction" that laboratory medicine has poor public visibility and is only marginally understood.

"I can't get no satisfaction" that laboratory professionals suffer from a lack of status among other health professionals.

"I can't get no satisfaction" from a possible public misconception of widespread clinical laboratory incompetence, especially as a blood banker. In Canada and in most countries transfusion medicine has led the way in implementing quality systems in clinical laboratories.

Of course, satisfaction should be internally generated and lab professionals are indeed dedicated to patient safety and intrinsically proud of their role on the health care team.

Keith and Mick got it wrong when they wrote:

I can't get no satisfaction
I can't get no satisfaction
'cause I try and I try and I try and I try.....

It's better to view satisfaction the way Mohandas K. Ghandi did:

  • Satisfaction lies in the effort, not in the attainment, full effort is full victory.
I'll go with the Mathatma for now....

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