Faculty of Medicine, Islamic University of Gaza, PO Box 108, Remal, Gaza, Gaza Strip, Palestine.
Nasser Medical Complex, Palestinian Ministry of Health, Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Palestine.
BMC Med Educ. 2020 Nov 19;20(1):447. doi: 10.1186/s12909-020-02375-z.
In undergraduate medical education, patient safety concepts and understanding of medical errors are under-represented. This problem is more evident in low-income settings. The aim of this study was to explore undergraduate medical students' attitudes towards patient safety in the low-income setting of the Gaza Strip.
A cross-sectional, descriptive study included medical students of the two medical schools in the Gaza Strip with 338 medical students completing the Attitudes to Patient Safety Questionnaire-IV (APSQ-IV), which examines patient attitudes in 29 items over 10 domains. Results are represented as means ± standard deviations for each item and domain as well as percentage of positive responses to specific items.
Medical students reported slightly positive patient safety attitudes (4.7 ± 0.5 of 7) with the most positive attitudes in the domains of situational awareness, importance of patient safety in the curriculum, error inevitability and team functioning. While no negative attitudes were reported, neutral attitudes were found in the domains of professional incompetence as a cause of error and error reporting confidence. Study year and gender had no significant association with patient safety attitudes, except for disclosure responsibility, where male students displayed significantly more positive attitudes. The study university was significantly associated with three of the 10 examined domains, all of which involved understanding of medical errors, for which students of University 2 (who had undergone limited patient safety training) held significantly more positive attitudes, compared with students of University 1 (who did not have structured patient safety training).
Medical students' patient safety attitudes were very similar among students from both universities, except for understanding of medical error, for which students, who had received structured training in this topic, displayed significantly more positive attitudes. This underlines the power of the 'hidden curriculum', where students adjust to prevalent cultures in local hospitals, while they do their clinical training. Furthermore, it highlights the need for a systematic inclusion of patient safety content in local undergraduate curricula.
在本科医学教育中,患者安全理念和对医疗差错的理解较为欠缺。这一问题在低收入环境中更为明显。本研究旨在探讨加沙地带低收入环境下本科医学生对患者安全的态度。
本研究采用横断面描述性研究方法,纳入加沙地带两所医学院的医学生,共有 338 名医学生完成了患者安全态度调查问卷第四版(APSQ-IV),该问卷通过 29 个项目的 10 个领域评估患者态度。结果以每个项目和领域的平均值±标准差以及对特定项目的阳性应答百分比表示。
医学生报告的患者安全态度略为积极(7 分制中得 4.7±0.5),在情境意识、患者安全在课程中的重要性、差错不可避免性和团队功能等领域态度最为积极。虽然没有报告消极态度,但在专业能力不足是差错原因和差错报告信心等领域持中立态度。研究年级和性别与患者安全态度无显著关联,但在披露责任方面,男生的态度明显更为积极。所研究的大学与 10 个考察领域中的 3 个显著相关,均涉及对医疗差错的理解,其中,接受过有限患者安全培训的第二所大学的学生比未接受过结构化患者安全培训的第一所大学的学生持更为积极的态度。
两所大学的医学生患者安全态度非常相似,但对医疗差错的理解有所不同,接受过结构化培训的学生态度明显更为积极。这突显了“隐性课程”的影响力,学生在进行临床培训的同时,适应了当地医院的主流文化。此外,这强调了在当地本科课程中系统纳入患者安全内容的必要性。