“…Patient arrival in the PACU often involves interprofessional handoff to transfer responsibility for ongoing care from the anesthetists to a nurse. This handoff transition has particularly high risk for handoff communication errors due to high patient acuity; limited familiarity with patients; compromised patient autonomy due to pain, anxiety, sedation, and disorientation; and multiple previous movements across transition points of surgical care (Clarke, Clark‐Burg, & Pavlos, 2018; Lillibridge, Botti, Wood, & Redley, 2017). The effectiveness of handoff in the PACU is further negatively impacted by unfamiliar caregivers, limited or variable input from different members of the perioperative team, time pressures to maintain efficiency, a noisy environment, multiple interruptions, and one‐way conversations geared toward information giving with limited active interactions by receiving teams (Randmaa, Engstrom, Swenne, & Martensson, 2017).…”