FALL 2005
VOL. 7 NO. 1

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    New Lessons about Leadership from Trauma Teams    Reducing Airport Congestion
    Do Entrepreneurs Really Think Differently?
    Strategic Underwriting in Initial Public Offers    Faculty Awards and Honors

“GSW to the left leg. BP 132 over 82. Pulse 110,” says the paramedic as he rushes a patient with a gunshot wound through the doors of the trauma center. What may seem like a chaotic scene to the casual observer is actually the seamless exchange of vital information and mixing and matching of trauma team members – as expertise dictates – in a display of coordination unlike any other workplace on earth.

“When dealing with critically injured patients, you have only a narrow window of to stabilize the patient before the body goes into shock and shuts down,” says Samer Faraj, associate professor of information systems at Smith. “Time is of the essence and coordination among the trauma team is very important.”

Faraj defines expertise coordination as the way in which information and skill interdependencies are managed. To a spectator of a trauma team in action, it might seem like everyone knows what to do and when to do it. In reality, the process is highly uncertain. The extent of a patient’s injury and medical history is often unknown. Trauma centers – like other high reliability organizations (air traffic control centers, nuclear power plants) – rely on very specific protocols to ensure that each patient receives the best treatment.

With two grants from the National Science Foundation totaling $700,000, Faraj has been studying coordination in trauma centers since 1999. “I went into the project aiming to study coordination failures,” says Faraj. “I thought there would be errors, but it turns out I was asking the wrong questions. A nurse once told me, ‘we don’t have coordination failures: we don’t allow it.’ That is when I decided to focus on the coordination practices that reduce failure.”

R. Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center at the University of Maryland in Baltimore, Md., is the oldest of three stand-alone trauma centers in the U.S., and often called the best trauma center in the world. Faraj and his team spent 18 months there studying coordination practices. Working with Seokhwa Yun, PhD 2001, they conducted interviews, observed patient admissions and operations, and shadowed key personnel.

“The paradox of the trauma center is that there is tremendous freedom and constraint at the same time. It is a totally different setting than a hospital,” says Faraj. “Besides the time pressure, the decisions are all negotiated around what is best for each patient. For example, if the anesthesiologist doesn’t feel like the patient can be anesthetized, he/she can override the desire of the surgeon to operate. If the nurse feels like a patient is in danger, he/she can refuse to obey orders. That is at the heart of a high reliability culture,” explains Faraj.

There is a fine line to be walked between empowering the front line caregivers and retaining control over the care being provided. “You must empower the front line, but if you do, lives could be lost because some hot shot surgeon wants to push the envelope,” says Faraj. “On the other hand, rules are limiting as you cannot pre-specify every action. That is where expertise coordination practices – or ‘dialogic coordination’ – come into play. In an effective high-liability organization, practitioners develop specific practices and workarounds that balance between the protocols in place and what expert judgment requires one to do in order to save the patient.”

After understanding coordination practices, Faraj focused his research on the use of information technology in the trauma center. Faraj and Sharyn Gardner, PhD ’03, surveyed 308 trauma centers throughout the U.S. to understand what communication technologies were most valuable in trauma settings. They found that trauma centers preferred reliable and simple communication technologies, such as the overhead page, because of the potential catastrophic impact of a technology failure.

Now working with Smith’s new Center for Health Information and Decision Systems (CHIDS), Faraj is studying the implementation of a “Vocera badge,” a voice-controlled wearable device that connects hospital staff and patients on a wireless network at St. Agnes Healthcare in Baltimore, Md. “Basically, this technology allows person-to-person direct communication and reduces the need for overhead pages and beepers. It is surprising how much quieter the hospital floor is without all the paging back and forth,” says Faraj.

Earlier in his career Faraj centered his research on the impact of information systems on organizations. He says that his current attention on the medical field has really hit a chord. “It is a heartening feeling to know that your research may help improve care and ultimately save lives,” he says.

By Alissa Arford-Leyl

  SMITH BUSINESS

Copyright 2005 Robert H. Smith School of Business