Communication of New Protocols Tip Sheet
This tip sheet emphasizes that effective communication is essential for successful protocol changes, helping prevent implementation gaps, misinterpretations, and reactive fixes by ensuring clarity, engagement, and sustained understanding across all levels of the organization.
Who it’s for:
- Risk professionals and patient safety leaders
- Clinical and operational leaders
- Frontline supervisors and unit‑based managers
- Change management teams and process‑improvement staff
- Educators, superusers, and staff supporting protocol rollout
What it can be used for:
- Standardizing communication practices for new protocols and changes
- Strengthening clarity, alignment, and understanding across leadership and frontline teams
- Supporting training, rollout planning, and skill validation
- Guiding readiness assessments and change‑management planning
- Improving sustainability of change through feedback loops and structured messaging
What’s inside:
- Situation: Change in health care is constant, high‑risk, and vulnerable to miscommunication and implementation gaps
- Background: Most organizations struggle to sustain change due to low buy‑in, cultural resistance, workload pressures, and inconsistent communication across leadership levels
- Assessment: Effective change requires evaluating urgency, resource needs, risks, workflow integration, leadership alignment, and organizational readiness
- Recommendations: Communicate early and often, engage staff at all levels, use multiple communication channels, reinforce messages repeatedly, validate skills, leverage superusers, celebrate early wins, and maintain ongoing feedback loops
Key Resources
Related Resources
Toolkits/Methodology
ASHRM has identified the following resources on patient safety to assist you in identifying useful information and helpful contacts.