Department of Criminal Law, Tilburg Law School, Tilburg University, Tilburg, The Netherlands.
Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Health Expect. 2022 Feb;25(1):264-275. doi: 10.1111/hex.13376. Epub 2021 Dec 20.
This study aimed to provide an overview of the strategies adopted by hospitals that target effective communication and nonmaterial restoration (i.e., without a financial or material focus) after health care incidents, and to formulate elements in hospital strategies that patients consider essential by analysing how patients have evaluated these strategies.
In the aftermath of a health care incident, hospitals are tasked with responding to the patients' material and nonmaterial needs, mainly restoration and communication. Currently, an overview of these strategies is lacking. In particular, a gap exists concerning how patients evaluate these strategies.
To identify studies in this scoping review, and following the methodological framework set out by Arksey and O'Malley, seven subject-relevant electronic databases were used (PubMed, Medline, Embase, CINAHL, PsycARTICLES, PsycINFO and Psychology & Behavioral Sciences Collection). Reference lists of included studies were also checked for relevant studies. Studies were included if published in English, after 2000 and as peer-reviewed articles.
The search yielded 13,989 hits. The review has a final inclusion of 16 studies. The inclusion led to an analysis of five different hospital strategies: open disclosure processes, communication-and-resolution programmes, complaints procedures, patients-as-partners in learning from health care incidents and subsequent disclosure, and mediation. The analysis showed three main domains that patients considered essential: interpersonal communication, organisation around disclosure and support, and desired outcomes.
This scoping review specifically takes the patient perspective in its methodological design and analysis. Studies were included if they contained an evaluation by patients, and the included studies were analysed on the essential elements for patients.
本研究旨在概述医院在医疗事故后采取的有效沟通和非物质恢复策略(即不关注财务或物质),并通过分析患者对这些策略的评价,制定患者认为重要的医院策略要素。
在医疗事故发生后,医院的任务是满足患者的物质和非物质需求,主要是恢复和沟通。目前,这些策略的概述尚不清楚。特别是,患者如何评价这些策略存在差距。
为了在这篇范围综述中确定研究,我们遵循 Arksey 和 O'Malley 提出的方法框架,使用了七个与主题相关的电子数据库(PubMed、Medline、Embase、CINAHL、PsycARTICLES、PsycINFO 和心理学与行为科学收藏)。还检查了纳入研究的参考文献列表,以寻找相关研究。如果研究发表于 2000 年后的英文同行评议文章,则纳入本研究。
检索结果共 13989 次命中。综述最终纳入了 16 项研究。纳入研究分析了 5 种不同的医院策略:公开披露程序、沟通与解决计划、投诉程序、患者作为医疗事故学习和后续披露的合作伙伴以及调解。分析显示,患者认为以下三个方面至关重要:人际沟通、围绕披露的组织和支持,以及期望的结果。
本范围综述在其方法设计和分析中特别从患者的角度出发。只有包含患者评估的研究才被纳入,并且纳入的研究分析了患者认为重要的要素。