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BJA Advance Access originally published online on March 27, 2006
British Journal of Anaesthesia 2006 96(5):551-559; doi:10.1093/bja/ael067
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© The Board of Management and Trustees of the British Journal of Anaesthesia 2006. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Non-technical skills in the intensive care unit

T. Reader1,*, R. Flin1, K. Lauche1 and B. H. Cuthbertson2

1 Industrial Psychology Research Centre, King's College Old Aberdeen, Scotland, UK
2 Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Health Services Research Unit, Institute of Applied Health Sciences, University of Aberdeen Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, Scotland, UK

*Corresponding author: Industrial Psychology Research Centre, King's College, University of Aberdeen, Old Aberdeen AB24 2UB, Scotland, UK. E-mail: tom.reader{at}abdn.ac.uk

In high-risk industries such as aviation, the skills not related directly to technical expertise, but crucial for maintaining safety (e.g. teamwork), have been categorized as non-technical skills. Recently, research in anaesthesia has identified and developed a taxonomy of the non-technical skills requisite for safety in the operating theatre. Although many of the principles related to performance and safety within anaesthesia are relevant to the intensive care unit (ICU), relatively little research has been done to identify the non-technical skills required for safe practice within the ICU. This review focused upon critical incident studies in the ICU, in order to examine whether the contributory factors identified as underlying the critical incidents, were associated with the skill categories (e.g. task management, teamwork, situation awareness and decision making) outlined in the Anaesthetists' Non-technical Skills (ANTS) taxonomy. We found that a large proportion of the contributory factors underlying critical incidents could be attributed to a non-technical skill category outlined in the ANTS taxonomy. This is informative both for future critical incident reporting, and also as an indication that the ANTS taxonomy may provide a good starting point for the development of a non-technical skills taxonomy for intensive care. However, the ICU presents a range of unique challenges to practitioners working within it. It is therefore necessary to conduct further non-technical skills research, using human factors techniques such as root-cause analyses, observation of behaviour, attitudinal surveys, studies of cognition, and structured interviews to develop a better understanding of the non-technical skills important for safety within the ICU. Examples of such research highlight the utility of these techniques.


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