Gupta Raghav, Moore Justin M, Adeeb Nimer, Griessenauer Christoph J, Schneider Anna M, Gandhi Chirag D, Harsh Griffith R, Thomas Ajith J, Ogilvy Christopher S
Neurosurgical Service, Department of Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Department of Neurosurgery, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Newark, New Jersey, USA.
Neurosurgical Service, Department of Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Department of Neurosurgery, Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California, USA.
World Neurosurg. 2018 Jan;109:e563-e570. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2017.10.022. Epub 2017 Oct 16.
Efforts to address resident errors and to enhance patient safety have included systemic reforms, such as the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education's (ACGME's) mandated duty-hour restrictions, and specialty-specific initiatives such as the neurosurgery Milestone Project. However, there is currently little data describing the basis for these errors or outlining trends in neurosurgical resident error.
An online questionnaire was distributed to program directors of 108 U.S. neurosurgery residency training programs to assess the frequency, most common forms and causes of resident error, the resulting patient outcomes, and the steps taken by residency programs to address these errors.
Thirty-one (28.7%) responses were received. Procedural/surgical error was the most commonly observed type of error. Transient injury and no injury to the patient were perceived to be the 2 most frequent outcomes. Inexperience or resident mistake despite adequate training were cited as the most common causes of error. Twenty-three (74.2%) respondents stated that a lower post graduate year level correlated with an increased incidence of errors. There was a trend toward an association between an increased number of residents within a program and the number of errors attributable to a lack of supervision (r = 0.36; P = 0.06). Most (93.5%) program directors do not believe that mandated duty-hour restrictions reduce error frequency.
Program directors believe that procedural error is the most commonly observed form of error, with post graduate year level believed to be an important predictor of error frequency. The perceived utility of systemic reforms that aim to reduce the incidence of resident error remains unclear.
为解决住院医师的失误并提高患者安全性所做的努力包括系统性改革,如毕业后医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)规定的工作时间限制,以及特定专业举措,如神经外科里程碑项目。然而,目前几乎没有数据描述这些失误的根源或概述神经外科住院医师失误的趋势。
向美国108个神经外科住院医师培训项目的项目主任发放了一份在线调查问卷,以评估住院医师失误的频率、最常见的形式和原因、由此产生的患者结局,以及住院医师培训项目为解决这些失误所采取的措施。
共收到31份(28.7%)回复。操作/手术失误是最常观察到的失误类型。短暂损伤和患者无损伤被认为是最常见的两种结局。经验不足或尽管接受了充分培训但住院医师失误被认为是最常见的失误原因。23名(74.2%)受访者表示,较低的研究生年级与失误发生率增加相关。一个项目中住院医师数量增加与因缺乏监督导致的失误数量之间存在关联趋势(r = 0.36;P = 0.06)。大多数(93.5%)项目主任认为规定的工作时间限制并不能降低失误频率。
项目主任认为操作失误是最常观察到的失误形式,研究生年级被认为是失误频率的一个重要预测因素。旨在降低住院医师失误发生率的系统性改革的实际效用仍不明确。