Department of Health Policy and Management, School of Public Health, SUNY Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, New York, USA.
J Hosp Med. 2011 Oct;6(8):445-52. doi: 10.1002/jhm.919.
Inadequate supervision is a significant contributing factor to medical errors involving trainees, but supervision in high-risk settings such as the intensive care unit (ICU) is not well studied.
We explored how residents in the ICU experienced supervision related to medication safety, not only from supervising physicians but also from other professionals. DESIGN, SETTING, MEASUREMENTS: Using qualitative methods, we examined in-depth interviews with 17 residents working in ICUs of three tertiary-care hospitals. We analyzed residents' perspectives on receiving and initiating supervision from physicians within the traditional medical hierarchy, and from other professionals, including nurses, staff pharmacists, and clinical pharmacists ("interprofessional supervision").
While initiating their own supervision within the traditional hierarchy, residents believed in seeking assistance from fellows and attendings, and articulated rules of thumb for doing so; however, they also experienced difficulties. Some residents were concerned that their questions would reflect poorly on them; others were embarrassed by their mistaken decisions. Conversely, residents described receiving interprofessional supervision from nurses and pharmacists, who proactively monitored, intervened in, and guided residents' decisions. Residents relied on nurses and pharmacists for nonjudgmental answers to their queries, especially after-hours. To enhance both types of supervision, residents emphasized the importance of improving interpersonal communication skills.
Residents depended on interprofessional supervision when making decisions regarding medications in the ICU. Improving interprofessional supervision, which thus far has been underrecognized and underemphasized in graduate medical education, can potentially improve medication safety in high-risk settings.
监督不足是导致受训者医疗失误的一个重要因素,但在重症监护病房(ICU)等高危环境中,监督工作并未得到充分研究。
我们探讨了 ICU 住院医师在药物安全方面的监督体验,不仅包括主治医生的监督,还包括其他专业人员的监督。
设计、设置、测量:我们采用定性方法,对来自三家三甲医院 ICU 的 17 名住院医师进行了深入访谈。我们分析了住院医师对接受和发起传统医疗层级内医师监督以及来自护士、药剂师和临床药师等其他专业人员(“跨专业监督”)监督的看法。
住院医师在传统层级内发起监督时,他们相信可以寻求同事和主治医生的帮助,并制定了一些经验法则,但也遇到了困难。一些住院医师担心自己的问题会影响他们的形象;其他人则对自己错误的决策感到尴尬。相比之下,住院医师描述了从护士和药剂师那里获得跨专业监督的经历,他们会主动监测、干预并指导住院医师的决策。住院医师依赖护士和药剂师来获得对其问题的非评判性答案,尤其是在下班后。为了加强这两种监督,住院医师强调了提高人际沟通技巧的重要性。
住院医师在 ICU 做出药物相关决策时依赖跨专业监督。改善跨专业监督——迄今为止,在住院医师教育中尚未得到充分认识和重视——可以潜在地提高高危环境中的药物安全性。