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The Impact of Anonymity in Emergency Medicine Morbidity and Mortality Conferences: Findings from a National Survey of Resident Physicians

机译:匿名在急诊医学发病率和死亡率会议中的影响:一项来自全国住院医师调查的结果

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Introduction: Although the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education mandates structured case review and discussion as a part of residency training, there remains little guidance on how best to structure these conferences to cultivate a culture of safety, promote learning, and ensure that system-based improvements can be made. We hypothesized that anonymous case discussion was associated with a more effective, and less punitive, morbidity and mortality (M&M) conference. Secondarily, we were interested in determining whether this core structural element was correlated with the culture of safety at an institution. Methods: We conducted a national survey at 33 emergency medicine residency programs evaluating residents’ perceptions of M&M and the culture of safety at their institutions. Data was analyzed using descriptive statistics and bivariate analyses. We summarized Likert scores using mean and 95% confidence intervals. We also performed content analysis of the free-text comments and report on the themes identified. Results: There were 1248 residents at the 33 programs surveyed. Of the 1002 who replied (80.3% response rate), 231 respondents reported anonymous case presentations and 744 reported non-anonymous case presentations. Residents at programs with anonymous case presentations were more likely to report that M&M was non-punitive. There were no other significant differences between anonymous and non-anonymous case presentations on any of the culture of safety domains measured. When these comments were systematically analyzed and coded, we found that the comments related to anonymity were both positive and negative. Among the themes identified were anonymity’s impact on punitive response to error, the ability to learn from cases, and professional responsibility. Conclusion: Anonymous M&Ms are associated with a perception of a less-punitive M&M and with better ratings in several conference-specific outcomes; however, there appears to be no association between the other Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality culture of safety scores and anonymity in M&M.
机译:简介:尽管研究生医学教育认证委员会要求进行结构化的案例审查和讨论,作为住院医师培训的一部分,但对于如何最好地组织这些会议以培养安全文化,促进学习并确保基于系统的会议的指导仍然很少。可以进行改进。我们假设匿名案例讨论与更有效,更不具惩罚性的发病率和死亡率(M&M)会议相关。其次,我们有兴趣确定此核心结构要素是否与机构的安全文化相关。方法:我们在33个急诊医学住院医师项目中进行了全国调查,评估了居民对M&M的看法以及所在机构的安全文化。使用描述性统计和双变量分析对数据进行分析。我们使用均值和95%置信区间总结了李克特得分。我们还对自由文本评论进行了内容分析,并报告了确定的主题。结果:33个项目中有1248名居民。在1002位回答者中(80.3%的答复率),有231位受访者报告了匿名案件介绍,而744位报告了非匿名案件介绍。使用匿名案例演示程序的居民更有可能报告M&M不具惩罚性。在所测量的任何安全域文化中,匿名和非匿名案例演示之间没有其他显着差异。对这些评论进行系统地分析和编码后,我们发现与匿名性相关的评论既有正面的也有负面的。确定的主题包括匿名对错误的惩罚性反应的影响,案例学习的能力以及职业责任感。结论:匿名的M&M与对惩罚性M&M的看法较少,在某些特定于会议的结果中的评分较高有关。但是,其他医疗保健研究机构与安全评分的质量文化和M&M的匿名性之间似乎没有关联。

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