Clinical handover communication at maternity shift changes and women’s
safety in Banjul, The Gambia: A mixed-methods study
Abstract
Objective To explore optimal handover processes in maternity care to
address service quality and women’s safety. Design Mixed-methods study.
Setting Maternity hospitals in Banjul, The Gambia. Sample 110
shift-to-shift handovers across maternity wards. Methods Handovers were
observed and compared against a standard, investigating content and
environment alongside semi-structured interviews and focus group
discussions with doctors, midwives and nurses. Main outcome measures
Number of information topics handed-over categorised by SBAR,
description of handover environment, supported by qualitative themes on
barriers and facilitators. Results Only 666 of 845 women (79%) were
handed over. Doctors had no scheduled handover. Shift-leads alone
gave/received handover, delayed [median 35 minutes, IQR 24-45] 82%
of the time; 96% of handovers were not confidential and 29% were
disrupted. Standardised guidelines and training were lacking. A median 6
of 28 topics [IQR 5-9] were communicated per woman. Information
varied significantly by time, high-risk classification and location. For
women in labour, 10 [IQR 8-14] items were handed-over, 8 [IQR
5-11] for women classed ‘high-risk’, 5 [IQR 4-7] for
ante/postnatal women (p<0.001); >50% had no care
management plan communicated. 21 interviews and 2 focus groups were
conducted. Barriers and facilitators surrounding three health service
factors emerged; health systems, organisation culture and individual
clinician factors. Conclusions Maternity handover was inconsistent,
hindered by contextual barriers including delays, lack of team
communication and guidelines, with some women omitted entirely. Findings
alongside clinicians views demonstrate feasible opportunities for
enhancing handover, thereby improving women’s safety globally. Funding
Arthur Thompson Trust and BMedSc student funding.