From the Department of Radiology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, 330 Brookline Ave, Boston, MA 02115. From the 2016 RSNA Annual Meeting.
Radiology. 2018 Sep;288(3):693-698. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2018171625. Epub 2018 May 15.
Purpose To investigate barriers to reporting safety concerns in an academic radiology department and to evaluate the role of human factors, including authority gradients, as potential barriers to safety concern reporting. Materials and Methods In this institutional review board-approved, HIPAA-compliant retrospective study, an online questionnaire link was emailed four times to all radiology department staff members (n = 648) at a tertiary care institution. Survey questions included frequency of speaking up about safety concerns, perceived barriers to speaking up, and the annual number of safety concerns that respondents were unsuccessful in reporting. Respondents' sex, role in the department, and length of employment were recorded. Statistical analysis was performed with the Fisher exact test. Results The survey was completed by 363 of the 648 employees (56%). Of those 363 employees, 182 (50%) reported always speaking up about safety concerns, 134 (37%) reported speaking up most of the time, 36 (10%) reported speaking up sometimes, seven (2%) reported rarely speaking up, and four (1%) reported never speaking up. Thus, 50% of employees spoke up about safety concerns less than 100% of the time. The most frequently reported barriers to speaking up included high reporting threshold (69%), reluctance to challenge someone in authority (67%), fear of disrespect (53%), and lack of listening (52%). Conclusion Of employees in a large academic radiology department, 50% do not attain 100% reporting of safety events. The most common human barriers to speaking up are high reporting threshold, reluctance to challenge authority, fear of disrespect, and lack of listening, which suggests that existing authority gradients interfere with full reporting of safety concerns.
调查学术放射科报告安全隐患的障碍,并评估人为因素(包括权力梯度)作为安全隐患报告潜在障碍的作用。
本研究为机构审查委员会批准的、符合 HIPAA 规定的回顾性研究,通过电子邮件向一家三级保健机构的放射科全体员工(n=648)发送了四次在线问卷调查链接。调查问题包括报告安全隐患的频率、报告安全隐患的障碍、报告不成功的安全隐患数量。记录了受访者的性别、在科室中的角色和工作年限。采用 Fisher 精确检验进行统计学分析。
共有 648 名员工中的 363 人(56%)完成了调查。在这 363 名员工中,182 人(50%)报告总是报告安全隐患,134 人(37%)报告大多数时候报告安全隐患,36 人(10%)报告有时报告安全隐患,7 人(2%)报告很少报告安全隐患,4 人(1%)报告从不报告安全隐患。因此,只有 50%的员工报告安全隐患的频率不足 100%。报告安全隐患的最常见障碍包括报告阈值高(69%)、不愿挑战权威(67%)、担心不被尊重(53%)和缺乏倾听(52%)。
在大型学术放射科中,50%的员工未达到 100%报告安全事件的水平。最常见的报告安全隐患的人为障碍是报告阈值高、不愿挑战权威、担心不被尊重和缺乏倾听,这表明现有的权力梯度干扰了安全隐患的全面报告。