When interactions are interruptions: an ethnographic study of information-sharing by speech and language therapists and nurses on stroke units.
Rachel BarnardJulia JonesMadeline CruicePublished in: Disability and rehabilitation (2021)
The temporal-spatial context impeded information-sharing, particularly about patients' communication needs. Consideration should be given to developing relationships between SLTs and nurses as key partners for patient care and raising the profile of communication information in ways that are relevant and useful to nursing work.Implications for rehabilitationStrategic waiting for opportunities to interrupt nurses and gain their attention is central to how speech and language therapists manage their need to share information informally with nurses.The small "windows in time" available for interaction influence information-sharing, with a limiting effect on information about patients' communication.There is potential to improve information-sharing between speech and language therapists and nurses by considering how the relevance of information for patient care could be made clearer.