Szymusiak John, Walk Thomas J, Benson Maggie, Hamm Megan, Zickmund Susan, Gonzaga Alda Maria, Bump Gregory M
Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA; Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA.
Pediatr Qual Saf. 2019 Apr 12;4(3):e167. doi: 10.1097/pq9.0000000000000167. eCollection 2019 May-Jun.
Little is known about what motivates residents to report adverse events. The goals of the qualitative study were to: (1) better understand facilitators to residents' event reporting and (2) identify effective interventions that encourage residents to report.
The authors conducted focus groups of upper-level residents from 4 training programs (2 internal medicine, a pediatric, and a combined medicine-pediatric) who rotated at 3 institutions within a large healthcare system in 2016. Quantitative data on reporting experience were gathered. Focus groups were audio recorded and transcribed. Two coders reviewed transcripts using the editing approach and organized codes into themes.
Sixty-four residents participated in 8 focus groups. Residents were universally exposed to reportable events and knew how to report. Residents' reporting behavior varied by site according to local culture, with residents filing more reports at the pediatric hospital compared to other sites, but all groups expressed similar general views about facilitators to reporting. Facilitators included familiarity with the investigation process, reporting via telephone, and routine safety educational sessions with safety administrators. Residents identified specific interventions that encouraged reporting at the pediatric hospital, including incorporating an attending physician review of events into sign-out and training on error disclosure.
This study provides insight into what motivates resident event reporting and describes concrete interventions to increase reporting. Our findings are consistent with the Theoretical Domains Framework of behavioral change. These strategies could prove successful at other pediatric hospitals to build a culture that values reporting and prepares residents as patient safety champions.
关于促使住院医师报告不良事件的动机,我们所知甚少。这项定性研究的目的是:(1)更好地了解促进住院医师报告事件的因素;(2)确定鼓励住院医师报告的有效干预措施。
作者对来自4个培训项目(2个内科、1个儿科以及1个内科 - 儿科联合项目)的高年级住院医师进行了焦点小组访谈,这些住院医师于2016年在一个大型医疗系统内的3家机构轮转。收集了关于报告经历的定量数据。焦点小组访谈进行了录音并转录。两名编码员采用编辑方法审查转录文本,并将编码整理成主题。
64名住院医师参与了8个焦点小组。住院医师普遍接触到可报告事件,并且知道如何报告。住院医师的报告行为因地点而异,具体取决于当地文化,与其他地点相比,儿科医院的住院医师提交的报告更多,但所有小组对报告促进因素表达了相似的总体看法。促进因素包括熟悉调查过程、通过电话报告以及与安全管理人员进行常规安全教育课程。住院医师确定了在儿科医院鼓励报告的具体干预措施,包括将主治医生对事件的审查纳入交班以及进行错误披露培训。
本研究深入了解了促使住院医师报告事件的动机,并描述了增加报告的具体干预措施。我们的研究结果与行为改变的理论领域框架一致。这些策略在其他儿科医院可能会成功,以建立一种重视报告的文化,并将住院医师培养成为患者安全的倡导者。