Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington, USA
Department of Surgery, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington, USA.
BMJ Lead. 2022 Mar;6(1):15-19. doi: 10.1136/leader-2020-000407. Epub 2021 Apr 26.
Despite training and the recognition that speaking up can mitigate harm to patients and save lives, healthcare professionals do not consistently speak up when they have patient safety concerns. The purpose of this study was to identify barriers to and facilitators of speaking up about patient safety concerns to inform the development of interventions that will increase this behaviour.
From October 2017 to February 2018, the study team conducted focus groups and interviews with nurses, advanced practice providers and physicians at three healthcare facilities. Participants were prompted to share their personal experiences with and perspectives on speaking up about patient safety concerns and to discuss strategies for communicating those concerns.
Tertiary academic healthcare centre.
62 healthcare professionals participated in the study. Purposeful sampling was used to include participants of different health professions and experience levels.
We planned to answer questions about why more healthcare professionals do not consistently speak up when they have legitimate patient safety concerns and to identify ways to enhance current interventions on speaking up behaviours, RESULTS: Twelve focus group discussions and two interviews were conducted with 62 participants. We identified two recurring themes: (1) The predominantly hierarchical culture of medicine is a barrier to speaking up and (2) Institutional, interpersonal and individual factors can modulate the impact of medicine's hierarchical culture on speaking up behaviours and inform the strategies employed.
The data highlighted the importance of moving beyond targeting front-line healthcare professionals for training in the skills of speaking up and engaging institutional leaders and systems to actively promote and reward speaking up behaviours.
尽管经过培训并认识到直言不讳可以减轻对患者的伤害并拯救生命,但医疗保健专业人员在对患者安全问题有顾虑时并不总是直言不讳。本研究的目的是确定阻碍和促进医疗保健专业人员直言不讳地表达患者安全问题的因素,以为干预措施的制定提供信息,以增加这种行为。
从 2017 年 10 月至 2018 年 2 月,研究小组在三家医疗机构对护士、高级执业医师和医生进行了焦点小组讨论和访谈。参与者被要求分享他们在表达对患者安全问题的关注方面的个人经验和观点,并讨论沟通这些问题的策略。
三级学术医疗中心。
62 名医疗保健专业人员参与了这项研究。采用有目的的抽样方法,包括不同医疗保健专业和经验水平的参与者。
我们计划回答为什么更多的医疗保健专业人员在对患者安全问题有合理顾虑时并不总是直言不讳的问题,并确定增强当前关于直言不讳行为的干预措施的方法。
对 62 名参与者进行了 12 次焦点小组讨论和 2 次访谈。我们确定了两个反复出现的主题:(1)医学中主要的等级制度文化是直言不讳的障碍;(2)机构、人际和个人因素可以调节医学等级制度文化对直言不讳行为的影响,并为所采用的策略提供信息。
数据强调了超越针对一线医疗保健专业人员进行直言不讳技能培训的重要性,需要让机构领导和系统积极参与,以促进和奖励直言不讳的行为。