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EO: 218 Patient Event Debriefs with Dr. Lynlee Wolfe
Episode 21820th March 2026 • Healthy Mom Healthy Baby Tennessee • Tennessee Initiative for Perinatal Quality Care
00:00:00 00:23:51

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In this episode of Healthy Mom, Healthy Baby Tennessee, Dr. Connie Graves and Dr. Lynlee Wolfe explore the critical role of patient event debriefs in perinatal care, with a particular focus on women with cardiac conditions during pregnancy. They discuss what a clinical debrief is, how it differs from informal feedback, and why structured debriefs are essential for improving team performance and patient safety. The conversation also touches on the emotional well-being of providers following adverse events, the emerging practice of patient-centered debriefs, and how simulation training has long modeled effective debriefing. A real-world example illustrates how a debrief led to a meaningful system change that directly improved care for future cardiac patients.

Key Takeaways

A clinical debrief is a structured, team-based conversation held after any clinical event — positive or negative — with the goal of identifying what went well, what could be improved, and what actionable system changes should follow.

Women with cardiac conditions face heightened risks throughout pregnancy, labor, and the postpartum period, making regular and structured debriefs especially critical in their care.

Debriefs differ from informal feedback in that they are structured, team-wide, and designed to maintain psychological safety by preventing blame, hierarchy, and emotion from dominating the discussion.

Anyone on the care team can facilitate a debrief — the key is establishing a blame-free, improvement-focused environment where all voices are equally valued.

Using a structured debrief form — whether from ACOG, AIM, SMFM, or a unit-developed version — is essential for keeping discussions on track, brief (typically five to ten minutes), and productive.

Debriefs play a meaningful role in supporting provider well-being by addressing the "second victim" phenomenon, helping team members process difficult events without internalizing blame.

Patient-centered debriefs, while not yet standard practice, are an emerging tool for addressing birth trauma and validating patient experiences following adverse events.

Simulation training has long demonstrated the power of post-event debriefs, and clinical teams can draw directly from that model to strengthen real-world learning and outcomes.

A real-world example showed that a single debrief following a cardiac patient's ICU admission led to a lasting system change — a dedicated, accessible location for patient care plans — that improved safety for all future patients.

Quotable Moments

"The process of doing a debrief is you go through an event. It can be a good event. It can be a bad event, a critical event, an adverse event. There's some clinical event that occurs and the team feels like it's time to sit down and discuss what happened." — Dr. Lynlee Wolfe

"Everybody thinks pregnancy is not really a medical condition, but we all know it is a medical condition and there are definitely things that can happen." —Dr. Lynlee Wolfe

"When we perform that debrief, we're trying to make sure everybody's input is taken and you do it in a non-punitive, non-blame-free environment." — Dr. Lynlee Wolfe

"The purpose of the debrief is quality improvement. It's emotional processing. It is not blame. It is not to find mistakes or evaluate personal performance." — Dr. Lynlee Wolfe

"We work as a team. We win as a team. We lose as a team. Everything's a team effort, especially on our labor and delivery units." — Dr. Lynlee Wolfe

"The debrief is really that learning point. And as in that simulation cycle that solidifies knowledge and helps improve outcomes overall and long term." — Dr. Lynlee Wolfe

"The best one is the one that you know you will use on a regular basis." — Dr. Lynlee Wolfe

"What somebody feels is what they feel. So we need to validate and then help process through that rather than explain to them, no, this is actually what happened." — Dr. Lynlee Wolfe

"There was a care plan in there. It did talk about fluid management and how we should be careful because even though she's physically stable at that moment, her ejection fraction was not at a point where we really needed to push anything." — Dr. Lynlee Wolfe

Show Notes by Barevalue.

No content or comments made in any TIPQC Healthy Mom Healthy Baby Podcast is intended to be comprehensive or medical advice. Neither healthcare providers nor patients should rely on TIPQC’s Podcasts in determining the best practices for any particular patient. Additionally, standards and practices in medicine change as new information and data become available and the individual medical professional should consult a variety of sources in making clinical decisions for individual patients. TIPQC undertakes no duty to update or revise any particular Podcast. It is the responsibility of the treating physician or health care professional, relying on independent experience and knowledge of the patient, to determine appropriate treatment.

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