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. 2023 Jun 29;33(12):386–389. doi: 10.1177/17504589231177833

Theatre practitioners and organisational adaptive capacity in disaster response

Jennifer Klunder-Rosser 1,
PMCID: PMC10693722  PMID: 37381883

Abstract

Disasters are increasing globally, requiring flexible strategic approaches from healthcare organisations to manage the resultant influx of patients requiring care while also maintaining normal operational services. Theatre practitioners play a key role in disaster response and recovery; however, a lack of appropriate skill utilisation may be reducing overall organisational adaptive capacity and leading to poorer outcomes for organisations, staff and patients. Understanding what skills individual practitioners have, and how they can be deployed to the greatest effect, is a concern for managers to ensure optimal use of resources and to reduce negative impacts of disaster response upon healthcare personnel. This is especially pertinent in the post-COVID healthcare climate where a paucity of operating theatre practitioners and poor workforce planning has led to a lack of surgical capacity at a time when it is most needed.

Keywords: Disaster response, Management, Operating theatres, Theatre practitioners, Adaptive capacity, Skill utilisation

Introduction

Disasters, caused by events such as terrorism and climate change, are increasing globally. Public institutions such as healthcare bodies are developing ever-evolving responses to deliver organisational continuity and resilience during response. Healthcare plays an acutely significant role as disasters generally lead to substantial and unpredictable number of people requiring medical intervention (Verheul & Dückers 2020). Resultantly, a priority for healthcare systems is to be resilient; ensuring they have the adaptive capacity (AC) to flexibly respond to an unanticipated demand for provisions, as well as maintain routine operational services (Wiig & O’Hara 2021). Operating theatres (OTs) play a central role in disaster response, providing reactive emergency surgical and anaesthetic care. Registered theatre practitioners (TPs) are highly skilled staff, integral to safe anaesthetic and surgical care, and who form a key component of a flexible OT response (Vogelsang et al 2020). They can be either operating department practitioners (ODPs) or registered nurses (RNs). Undergraduate training pathways for the professions differ, with ODPs undertaking OT-specific training across all three roles (scrub, anaesthetics and recovery). RNs undertake a broader healthcare-wide pathway and may undertake postgraduate training to attain OT-specific competencies such as anaesthetic qualifications and scrub skills (GRIFT 2022). In this paper, the term TPs will be used to refer to both staff groups unless otherwise stated.

Lowes et al (2020) and Vogelsang et al (2020) suggest the TPs skill set is under-researched and institutionally poorly understood. In addition, organisational recovery in the National Health Service (NHS) post-pandemic is undermined by a lack of TPs workforce, reducing organisations’ ability to increase surgical capacity to tackle the extensive backlog of patents awaiting treatment (GRIFT 2022). Retention of staff is a particularly well recognised problem with The King’s Fund (Charles & Ewbank 2021) stating years of poor workforce planning have resulted in a workforce crisis across the NHS, and Mccabe et al (2020) suggesting a lack of nurses is the single biggest barrier to improving organisational recovery. Innovative solutions are required to better attract and retain appropriately skilled TPs. Better understanding the skills and knowledge of TPs to utilise them more effectively during disaster response may go some way to improving their experiences of disaster, therein improving retention, and so organisational AC during disaster recovery. Exploring if there is a difference between the flexibility and utilisation of ODPs’ and RNs’ skill sets in disaster response may also inform future disaster workforce planning and policy. This will allow for more effective utilisation of the TPs skill set during disaster, positively contributing to the overall medical response, and improving overall reactive delivery or surged surgical provision.

Adaptive capacity (AC)

Organisational resilience in disaster response and recovery does not refer to any one organisational feature, but a number of factors which collectively provide the foundation for flexible response, such as strong leadership and a committed workforce (Lyng et al 2022). AC therefore refers to the ability of organisations to adapt to unpredictability while also ensuring minimal disruption to normal services (Engle 2011, Zhang et al 2018). Rumsey et al (2014) identify four determinants of organisational AC as inter-organisational, intra-organisational, objective and subjective. Intra-organisational determinants, such as leadership and competence, are pertinent to OT management when considering how to best deploy their workforce.

Nevertheless, the adaptive needs of an organisation may conflict with the needs of managers and healthcare professionals as tactical demands can clash with operational pressures and targeted outputs. Organisations need a flexible workforce who can rapidly deploy to most pressurised clinical areas post disaster, a concept known as surge capacity. The need for flexibility in the healthcare workforce is increasingly well understood, with training pathways and policies being developed to encourage this (GRIFT 2022). In addition, the role of psychological safety in staff adaptability is well established, with improved flexibility seen in staff who feel psychological safe in their work environments and leaders managerial practices (Edmondson et al 2016). Despite this, redeployment can be a damaging experience for staff, increasing risk of stress-related illness, mismanagement and negatively affect staff retention, particularly among those who do not feel psychologically safe or well supported by managers (Galura 2020, Willis et al 2021). For TPs, an already scare resource at a high risk of negative occupational mental-health consequences, this risk is further compounded (Cumpsty-Fowler & Saletnik 2021, Esmaeil et al 2022). This creates a danger for managers of a workforce at increased risk of illness and demotivation, undermining the organisation’s ability to recover and adversely affecting their ability to provide surge capability in the time of most pronounced need. Understanding which managerial practices can enhance psychological safety, staff engagement and utilisation may go some way to improving organisation AC in disaster response.

Staff utilisation and redeployment

Improving TP’s experiences during disaster response and appropriately utilising staff could be a key area of learning for managers to improve inter-departmental and intra-organisational AC. A clinical workforce who possesses the basic knowledge, skills and capabilities to respond adroitly to organisational need is the ideal of disaster response, and redeploying the available workforce to pressurised areas is a vital component to allow hospitals to effectively provide care and manage unpredictable patient flow (Adams & Berry 2012, Veenema et al 2019). However, quality and quantity of staff are independent variables in surge capacity. An oft-neglected priority for disaster management is effectively utilising the specific competencies of individual healthcare professionals, rather than simply increasing the volume of available staff (Faccincani et al 2018, Veenema et al 2016).

The most recent disaster which employed surge workforce methodologies is the COVID-19 pandemic. In the United Kingdom, critical care unit (CCU) capacity was increased by over 70% through a range of redeployment methods, but this came at significant cost to surgical services (Mccabe et al 2020). TPs were prioritised for redeployment to CCU due to the reduced surgical workload and transferability of OT skills to CCU, particularly within anaesthetic and recovery practitioners. This resulted in a 30% reduction in surgical activity to emergency provision only (Melman et al 2021, Price et al 2021, Ryder et al 2021). Subsequently, Hall et al’s (2021) international survey of 173 major trauma centres found 74 centres reported over 50% reduced access to OT and 84.4% reported reduced OT efficiency due to TPs redeployment and increased infection control procedures. By the end of 2021, there were anticipated to be between 3 and 4 million patients awaiting surgery due to COVID-19, and 7.2 million people waiting for elective care as of December 2022 (BMA 2022, Melman et al 2021, Price et al 2021). To overcome these challenges, a significant increase in surgical capacity is required, but a lack of suitable workforce and appropriate management of resources is one of the limiting factors enabling this.

Despite this substantial impact upon surgical capacity, evidence suggests redeployed TPs were not consistently well utilised. Harris & Coopersmith (2021) found that, although 95% of hospitals cancelled elective surgical procedures to redeploy TPs to CCU, less than half utilised their skill set in their deployed roles. This impacted staff wellbeing, with Walker & Gerakios (2021) finding redeployed staff felt frustrated at not being able to employ their skills. This in turn led to feelings of boredom, under appreciation and dissatisfaction, although it is unclear how generalisable these findings are due to limited available qualitative research exploring TP’s experiences. This is suggestive though of a need for managers to reconsider the skill set of individual staff and how they are used in an over-arching healthcare framework. Deployed individuals to skill-specific teams, rather than reactively surging homogeneous staff groups in their entirety to one clinical specialism at the expense of the entire system, may offer an opportunity to improve disaster response workforce policies.

Possible solutions

Recent research offer possible direction for organisational learning and improved management practices. Oakley et al (2020) redeployed TPs to specialised multidisciplinary teams which maximised their existing skills, such as scrub practitioners to tracheostomy teams. A single study of one hospital’s approach to surge workforce is difficult to generalise more widely, although Lee et al (2020), Vera San Juan et al (2021), Kennedy et al (2022) and Holthof & Luedi (2021) also support this method of task-based teams. A pragmatic hypothesis is that this approach may offer solutions for managers to allow greater exploitation of the available workforce when the resource is limited, while also reducing negative consequences for TPs. However, it is unclear if this practice of skill-specific team occurs consistently, or if this is an isolated approach.

Conclusion

TPs utilisation is a limited research field, and better understating what are the individual and collective skills practitioners have may allow managers to employ resources more effectively in disaster response and recovery. A body of research looks at organisational response to surge capacity during COVID-19, but little looks at the utilisation of surged staffs’ skills, or what organisational learning could be identified from staff experiences during this type of response. A large body of research examines human factors in healthcare professionals to improve patient safety, generally under ‘normal’ circumstances rather than during disaster (Bjurling-Sjöberg et al 2021, Wiig & O’Hara 2021), or supporting psychological wellbeing during disasters (Heath et al 2020, Kakemam et al 2021). In short, research has looked at how disaster response is organised at a macro level, or how individuals experienced disasters at a micro level, but not how the individual experience impacts upon organisational resilience during disaster response and recovery. Better understanding how the utilisation of TPs skills influences organisational AC is a relatively underexplored area and a priority area for OT managers to develop to improve future resilience.

Future research

Much of the current literature regarding disaster management focuses either on existing gaps in staffing, the need for surge staffing during a disaster, or the preparedness of Emergency Department and Critical Care staff for disasters. Little empirical research looks at how managers utilise TPs resources, skills or knowledge in disaster response. No research explicitly examines TP’s experiences of disaster, skill utilisation or deployment during disasters to support organisational resilience, and this gap in the research is now the subject of a PhD research project by the author.

Key points

  • Adaptive capacity underpins organisational disaster response.

  • Operating theatres play a central role in disaster response.

  • Understanding how the skills of theatre practitioners are use in disasters is a key concern for managers.

  • Effectively utilising theatre practitioners’ skills during disaster may improve organisational adaptive capacity and recovery after disaster.

Footnotes

The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship and/or publication of this article.

Funding: The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship and/or publication of this article.

ORCID iD: Jennifer Klunder-Rosser Inline graphic https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6365-9019

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