A night nurse began using a two‑step check during rounds—ask about dizziness, then confirm footwear and call bell reach. After sharing the quick prompt in a huddle, colleagues copied it. Within a fortnight, near‑miss notes shifted, and unassisted attempts dropped. No new forms, just a practiced line and a shared habit that staff could repeat even on tough nights.
A paramedic crew trialed a thirty‑second handover pattern anchored on three cues: immediate risks, current interventions, and pending decisions. Practiced twice daily as a micro‑drill, it tightened language and timing. Emergency department staff reported clearer starts, fewer clarifying questions, and quicker first actions. The improvement required no extra shift time, only a consistent, short rehearsal.