Gallagher Thomas H, Garbutt Jane M, Waterman Amy D, Flum David R, Larson Eric B, Waterman Brian M, Dunagan W Claiborne, Fraser Victoria J, Levinson Wendy
Departments of Medicine and Medical History and Ethics, University of Washington School of Medicine, 4311 11th Avenue NW, Seattle, WA 98105, USA.
Arch Intern Med. 2006;166(15):1585-93. doi: 10.1001/archinte.166.15.1585.
A gap exists between patients' desire to be told about medical errors and present practice. Little is known about how physicians approach disclosure. The objective of the present study was to describe how physicians disclose errors to patients.
Mailed survey of 2637 medical and surgical physicians in the United States (Missouri and Washington) and Canada (national sample). Participants received 1 of 4 scenarios depicting serious errors that varied by specialty (medical and surgical scenarios) and by how obvious the error would be to the patient if not disclosed (more apparent vs less apparent). Five questions measured what respondents would disclose using scripted statements.
Wide variation existed regarding what information respondents would disclose. Of the respondents, 56% chose statements that mentioned the adverse event but not the error, while 42% would explicitly state that an error occurred. Some physicians disclosed little information: 19% would not volunteer any information about the error's cause, and 63% would not provide specific information about preventing future errors. Disclosure was affected by the nature of the error and physician specialty. Of the respondents, 51% who received the more apparent errors explicitly mentioned the error, compared with 32% who received the less apparent errors (P<.001); 58% of medical specialists explicitly mentioned the error, compared with 19% of surgical specialists (P<.001). Respondents disclosed more information if they had positive disclosure attitudes, felt responsible for the error, had prior positive disclosure experiences, and were Canadian.
Physicians vary widely in how they would disclose errors to patients. Disclosure standards and training are necessary to meet public expectations and promote professional responsibility following errors.
患者希望被告知医疗差错的愿望与当前的实际做法之间存在差距。对于医生如何进行差错告知知之甚少。本研究的目的是描述医生如何向患者披露差错。
对美国(密苏里州和华盛顿州)和加拿大(全国样本)的2637名内科和外科医生进行邮寄调查。参与者收到4种情景描述中的1种,这些情景描述了严重差错,差错因专业(内科和外科情景)以及如果不披露差错对患者来说有多明显(更明显与不太明显)而有所不同。五个问题衡量了受访者会使用书面陈述披露哪些信息。
受访者在披露哪些信息方面存在很大差异。在受访者中,56%选择提及不良事件但未提及差错的陈述,而42%会明确指出发生了差错。一些医生披露的信息很少:19%不会主动提供任何关于差错原因的信息,63%不会提供关于预防未来差错的具体信息。披露情况受差错性质和医生专业的影响。在收到更明显差错的受访者中,51%明确提到了差错,而收到不太明显差错的受访者中这一比例为32%(P<0.001);58%的内科专科医生明确提到了差错,而外科专科医生中这一比例为19%(P<0.001)。如果受访者有积极的披露态度、对差错感到负责、有过积极的披露经历且来自加拿大,他们会披露更多信息。
医生在向患者披露差错的方式上差异很大。需要制定披露标准并进行培训,以满足公众期望并促进差错发生后的职业责任。