Center for Patient and Professional Advocacy, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee.
Department of Surgery, Stanford University, Stanford, California.
JAMA Surg. 2019 Sep 1;154(9):828-834. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2019.1738.
For surgical teams, high reliability and optimal performance depend on effective communication, mutual respect, and continuous situational awareness. Surgeons who model unprofessional behaviors may undermine a culture of safety, threaten teamwork, and thereby increase the risk for medical errors and surgical complications.
To test the hypothesis that patients of surgeons with higher numbers of reports from coworkers about unprofessional behaviors are at greater risk for postoperative complications than patients whose surgeons generate fewer coworker reports.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This retrospective cohort study assessed data from 2 geographically diverse academic medical centers that participated in the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) and recorded and acted on electronic reports of safety events from coworkers describing unprofessional behavior by surgeons. Patients included in the NSQIP database who underwent inpatient or outpatient operations at 1 of the 2 participating sites from January 1, 2012, through December 31, 2016, were eligible. Patients were excluded if they were younger than 18 years on the date of the operation or if the attending surgeon had less than 36 months of monitoring for coworker reports preceding the date of the operation. Data were analyzed from August 8, 2018, through April 9, 2019.
Coworker reports about unprofessional behavior by the surgeon in the 36 months preceding the date of the operation.
Postoperative surgical or medical complications, as defined by the NSQIP, within 30 days of the operation.
Among 13 653 patients in the cohort (54.0% [7368 ] female; mean [SD] age, 57 [16] years) who underwent operations performed by 202 surgeons (70.8% [143] male), 1583 (11.6%) experienced a complication, including 825 surgical (6.0%) and 1070 medical (7.8%) complications. Patients whose surgeons had more coworker reports were significantly more likely to experience any complication (0 reports, 954 of 8916 [10.7%]; ≥4 reports, 294 of 2087 [14.1%]; P < .001), any surgical complication (0 reports, 516 of 8916 [5.8%]; ≥4 reports, 159 of 2087 [7.6%]; P < .01), or any medical complication (0 reports, 634 of 8916 [7.1%]; ≥4 reports, 196 of 2087 [9.4%]; P < .001). The adjusted complication rate was 14.3% higher for patients whose surgeons had 1 to 3 reports and 11.9% higher for patients whose surgeons had 4 or more reports compared with patients whose surgeons had no coworker reports (P = .05).
Patients whose surgeons had higher numbers of coworker reports about unprofessional behavior in the 36 months before the patient's operation appeared to be at increased risk of surgical and medical complications. These findings suggest that organizations interested in ensuring optimal patient outcomes should focus on addressing surgeons whose behavior toward other medical professionals may increase patients' risk for adverse outcomes.
对于外科团队来说,高可靠性和最佳表现取决于有效的沟通、相互尊重和持续的情境意识。表现不专业的外科医生可能会破坏安全文化,威胁团队合作,从而增加医疗错误和手术并发症的风险。
检验假设,即同事对不专业行为的报告数量较多的外科医生的患者,其术后并发症的风险高于同事报告数量较少的外科医生的患者。
设计、地点和参与者:这项回顾性队列研究评估了来自 2 个地理位置不同的学术医疗中心的数据,这些中心参加了国家外科质量改进计划(NSQIP),并记录和处理了同事对外科医生不专业行为的电子报告中的安全事件。符合条件的患者为 2012 年 1 月 1 日至 2016 年 12 月 31 日期间在这 2 个参与地点之一接受住院或门诊手术的 NSQIP 数据库中的患者。如果患者在手术当天年龄小于 18 岁或主治外科医生在手术当天之前的 36 个月内没有监测到同事报告,则将其排除在外。数据分析于 2018 年 8 月 8 日至 2019 年 4 月 9 日进行。
手术前 36 个月内外科医生的同事对不专业行为的报告。
手术 30 天内的术后手术或医疗并发症,如 NSQIP 所定义。
在队列中的 13653 名患者(54.0%[7368]为女性;平均[标准差]年龄为 57[16]岁)中,有 202 名外科医生(70.8%[143]为男性)进行了手术,其中 1583 名(11.6%)发生了并发症,包括 825 例手术(6.0%)和 1070 例医疗(7.8%)并发症。有更多同事报告不专业行为的患者发生任何并发症的可能性显著更高(0 份报告,8916 例中的 954 例[10.7%];≥4 份报告,2087 例中的 294 例[14.1%];P < .001)、任何手术并发症(0 份报告,8916 例中的 516 例[5.8%];≥4 份报告,2087 例中的 159 例[7.6%];P < .01)或任何医疗并发症(0 份报告,8916 例中的 634 例[7.1%];≥4 份报告,2087 例中的 196 例[9.4%];P < .001)。与没有同事报告的患者相比,有 1 至 3 份报告的患者的并发症发生率高出 14.3%,有 4 份或更多报告的患者的并发症发生率高出 11.9%(P = .05)。
在患者手术前 36 个月内,同事对不专业行为的报告数量较多的患者似乎手术和医疗并发症的风险增加。这些发现表明,有兴趣确保患者获得最佳结果的组织应重点关注那些行为可能会增加患者不良结果风险的外科医生。