Fein Stephanie P, Hilborne Lee H, Spiritus Eugene M, Seymann Gregory B, Keenan Craig R, Shojania Kaveh G, Kagawa-Singer Marjorie, Wenger Neil S
Division of General Internal Medicine and Health Services Research, David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2007 Jun;22(6):755-61. doi: 10.1007/s11606-007-0157-9. Epub 2007 Mar 20.
Patients want to know when errors happen in their care. Professional associations, ethicists, and patient safety experts endorse disclosure of medical error to patients. Surveys of physicians show that they believe harmful errors should be disclosed to patients, yet errors are often not disclosed.
To understand the discrepancy between patients' expectations and physicians' behavior concerning error disclosure.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: We conducted focus groups to determine what constitutes disclosure of medical error. Twenty focus groups, 4 at each of 5 academic centers, included 204 hospital administrators, physicians, residents, and nurses.
Qualitative analysis of the focus group transcripts with attention to examples of error disclosure by clinicians and hospital administrators.
Clinicians and administrators considered various forms of communication about errors to be error disclosure. Six elements of disclosure identified from focus group transcripts characterized disclosures ranging from Full disclosure (including admission of a mistake, discussion of the error, and a link from the error to harm) to Partial disclosures, which included deferral, misleading statements, and inadequate information to "connect the dots." Descriptions involving nondisclosure of harmful errors were uncommon.
Error disclosure may mean different things to clinicians than it does to patients. The various forms of communication deemed error disclosure by clinicians may explain the discrepancy between error disclosure beliefs and behaviors. We suggest a definition of error disclosure to inform practical policies and interventions.
患者想知道在其治疗过程中何时发生了错误。专业协会、伦理学家和患者安全专家都支持向患者披露医疗差错。对医生的调查表明,他们认为应该向患者披露有害差错,但差错往往并未得到披露。
了解患者在差错披露方面的期望与医生行为之间的差异。
设计、场所和参与者:我们开展了焦点小组讨论,以确定医疗差错披露的构成要素。在5个学术中心各进行4次焦点小组讨论,共有204名医院管理人员、医生、住院医师和护士参与。
对焦点小组讨论记录进行定性分析,重点关注临床医生和医院管理人员披露差错的实例。
临床医生和管理人员认为各种关于差错的沟通形式都属于差错披露。从焦点小组讨论记录中确定的差错披露的六个要素,描述了从完全披露(包括承认错误、讨论差错以及将差错与伤害联系起来)到部分披露的各种披露情况,部分披露包括拖延、误导性陈述以及缺乏“联系各个环节”的充分信息。涉及不披露有害差错的描述并不常见。
差错披露对临床医生和患者可能意味着不同的事情。临床医生视为差错披露的各种沟通形式,可能解释了差错披露观念与行为之间的差异。我们建议给出差错披露的定义,以为实际政策和干预措施提供依据。