Pierluissi Edgar, Fischer Melissa A, Campbell Andre R, Landefeld C Seth
San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco,California, USA.
JAMA. 2003 Dec 3;290(21):2838-42. doi: 10.1001/jama.290.21.2838.
Morbidity and mortality conferences in residency programs are intended to discuss adverse events and errors with a goal to improve patient care. Little is known about whether residency training programs are accomplishing this goal.
To determine the frequency at which morbidity and mortality conference case presentations include adverse events and errors and whether the errors are discussed and attributed to a particular cause.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Prospective survey conducted by trained physician observers from July 2000 through April 2001 on 332 morbidity and mortality conference case presentations and discussions in internal medicine (n = 100) and surgery (n = 232) at 4 US academic hospitals.
Frequencies of presentation of adverse events and errors, discussion of errors, and attribution of errors.
In internal medicine morbidity and mortality conferences, case presentations and discussions were 3 times longer than in surgery conferences (34.1 minutes vs 11.7 minutes; P =.001), more time was spent listening to invited speakers (43.1% vs 0%; P<.001), and less time was spent in audience discussion (15.2% vs 36.6%; P<.001). Fewer internal medicine case presentations included adverse events (37 [37%] vs 166 surgery case presentations [72%]; P<.001) or errors causing an adverse event (18 [18%] vs 98 [42%], respectively; P =.001). When an error caused an adverse event, the error was discussed as an error less often in internal medicine (10 errors [48%] vs 85 errors in surgery [77%]; P =.02). Errors were attributed to a particular cause less often in medicine than in surgery conferences (8 [38%] of 21 medicine errors vs 88 [79%] of 112 surgery errors; P<.001). In discussions of cases with errors, conference leaders in both internal medicine and surgery infrequently used explicit language to signal that an error was being discussed and infrequently acknowledged having made an error.
Our findings call into question whether adverse events and errors are routinely discussed in internal medicine training programs. Although adverse events and errors were discussed frequently in surgery cases, teachers in both surgery and internal medicine missed opportunities to model recognition of error and to use explicit language in error discussion by acknowledging their personal experiences with error.
住院医师培训项目中的发病率和死亡率会议旨在讨论不良事件和错误,目标是改善患者护理。对于住院医师培训项目是否实现了这一目标,人们了解甚少。
确定发病率和死亡率会议病例报告中包含不良事件和错误的频率,以及这些错误是否得到讨论并归因于特定原因。
设计、地点和参与者:2000年7月至2001年4月,由经过培训的内科医生观察员在美国4家学术医院对332例内科(n = 100)和外科(n = 232)发病率和死亡率会议的病例报告及讨论进行前瞻性调查。
不良事件和错误的报告频率、错误的讨论情况以及错误的归因。
在内科发病率和死亡率会议中,病例报告和讨论时间比外科会议长3倍(34.1分钟对11.7分钟;P = 0.001),花在听取特邀演讲者发言上的时间更多(43.1%对0%;P < 0.001),而花在听众讨论上的时间更少(15.2%对36.6%;P < 0.001)。内科病例报告中包含不良事件的较少(37例[37%]对166例外科病例报告[72%];P < 0.001),或导致不良事件的错误也较少(分别为18例[18%]对98例[42%];P = 0.001)。当错误导致不良事件时,在内科将错误作为错误进行讨论的情况较少(10例错误[48%]对外科85例错误[77%];P = 0.02)。与外科会议相比,内科会议中错误归因于特定原因的情况较少(21例内科错误中的8例[38%]对112例外科错误中的88例[79%];P < 0.001)。在对有错误的病例讨论中,内科和外科会议的负责人很少使用明确的语言来表明正在讨论错误,也很少承认犯了错误。
我们的研究结果使人质疑内科培训项目是否经常讨论不良事件和错误。虽然外科病例中经常讨论不良事件和错误,但外科和内科的教师都错过了通过承认自己的错误经历来示范错误识别并在错误讨论中使用明确语言的机会。