Creates structured handoff communications using I-PASS methodology for shift transitions. Use when performing sign-outs, creating handoff documents, or transitioning patient care between providers.
Creates structured handoff communications using I-PASS methodology for shift transitions between providers.
Why This Skill Exists
Communication failures during handoffs cause an estimated 80% of serious medical errors according to The Joint Commission. The landmark I-PASS study (Starmer et al., NEJM 2014) demonstrated a 30% reduction in preventable adverse events when structured handoff tools replaced unstructured sign-outs. The Joint Commission NPSG 02.05.01 mandates standardized handoff communication, and CMS Conditions of Participation require documented transfer of essential patient information at every care transition.
Hospitalists perform 2-4 handoffs per 24-hour cycle (day-to-night, night-to-day, weekend cross-cover, service changes). Each handoff represents a discontinuity point where critical information — pending results, active titrations, family concerns, anticipated deterioration — can be lost. Incomplete handoffs are the single most common contributing factor in malpractice cases involving delayed diagnosis or treatment in the inpatient setting.
Checkpoint A: Pre-Draft Intake (Mandatory)
Before creating handoff documentation, confirm:
관련 스킬
What type of handoff is this — shift change, service transfer, cross-cover sign-out, or discharge-to-PCP? (Default: Shift change)
How many patients are being handed off? (Default: Full census)
What is the acuity distribution — any ICU, step-down, or rapid-response patients? (Default: Review by unit)
Are there pending critical results (cultures, biopsies, imaging reads) expected during the receiving shift? (Default: Flag all pending orders > 4 hours old)
Are there active titrations — drips, insulin sliding scale adjustments, diuretic challenges — that require monitoring? (Default: Review active IV orders)
Are there family meetings or goals-of-care discussions scheduled or anticipated? (Default: Check social work and case management notes)
Are there anticipated discharges the receiving provider should execute? (Default: Flag patients meeting discharge criteria)
Documents to Request
Current patient list with room numbers and admitting diagnoses
Most recent progress note for each patient
Active medication list including IV drips and titration parameters
Pending orders and expected result times
Nursing concern list or charge nurse summary
Consultant recommendations not yet acted upon
Case management discharge planning status
Step 1: Apply the I-PASS Framework
Structure every patient handoff using all five I-PASS elements:
I — Illness Severity
Classify each patient into one of three categories:
Classification
Definition
Action Required
Stable
Expected clinical course, no active concerns
Routine monitoring per current orders
Watcher
Potential for deterioration, requires closer monitoring
Specify what to watch and when to escalate
Unstable
Actively deteriorating or high risk for acute decompensation
Immediate bedside assessment by receiving provider
P — Patient Summary
One-liner format: "[Age] [sex] with [PMH] admitted [date] for [diagnosis], currently [clinical status]."
Example: "72M with COPD, CHF (EF 30%), CKD3 admitted 3 days ago for COPD exacerbation, currently on 2L NC, weaning steroids, anticipated discharge tomorrow."
A — Action List
Categorize pending actions by urgency:
To-Do (must complete this shift): Labs to follow up, medications to titrate, consults to call, procedures to schedule
Stable patients — abbreviated handoff (one-liner + any pending items)
Step 3: Document Cross-Cover Essentials
For cross-cover sign-out (covering unfamiliar patients), include additional fields:
Code status: Full code / DNR / DNI / Comfort measures only
Allergies: Top 3 critical allergies with reaction type
Weight: For dosing calculations (especially anticoagulants)
Isolation status: Contact, droplet, airborne, or standard
Key contacts: Primary nurse, consultant on call, family point of contact
Recent procedures: Within 48 hours, with complication watch parameters
Lines and devices: Central lines (type, day count), Foley (day count), drains
Step 4: Conduct the Verbal Handoff
Follow these communication standards:
Environment: Quiet, uninterrupted space; no hallway handoffs for unstable patients
Duration: 2-3 minutes per Watcher/Unstable patient; 30-60 seconds per Stable patient
Face-to-face preferred: For Unstable patients, in-person handoff at bedside when possible
Written + verbal: Never rely solely on written sign-out — verbal synthesis catches nuance
Closed-loop: Receiver summarizes back; sender confirms or corrects
Checkpoint B: Post-Draft Alignment (Mandatory)
After completing handoff documentation:
Has every Watcher and Unstable patient been given specific contingency plans?
Are all pending critical results flagged with expected timing and follow-up action?
Has the code status been documented for every patient?
Are active titrations and drips documented with current parameters and targets?
Has the receiving provider confirmed understanding through read-back of key items?
Quality Audit
Every patient is classified as Stable, Watcher, or Unstable
One-liner patient summary is present for each patient
Action items are categorized by urgency (must-do vs. FYI)
Contingency plans use "If…then" format for all Watcher/Unstable patients
Code status is documented for every patient
Allergies are listed for cross-cover patients
Pending results include expected timing and responsible action
Active drips and titrations include current rate and target parameters
Anticipated admissions or discharges during receiving shift are noted
Family/social concerns are flagged when relevant
Handoff was conducted in an appropriate environment (not hallway)
Receiver read-back was completed and documented
Guidelines
Never omit the Situation Awareness (contingency) element — it is the most safety-critical component of I-PASS
Update handoff documents in real-time throughout the shift, not just at sign-out
Flag any patient with a sentinel event risk (active GI bleed, new chest pain, recent procedural complication) at the top of the list regardless of current stability
Include antibiotic day counts and stop dates for all patients on antimicrobials
Document the time of handoff and names of sender/receiver for medicolegal traceability
If a critical pending result is expected during the transition, both sender and receiver should agree on who is responsible for follow-up
Use standardized printed or EMR-generated handoff templates rather than free-text notes
Limit interruptions — studies show each interruption during handoff increases error risk by 12%