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首页> 外文期刊>Psychology, Health & Medicine >‘Skating on thin ice?’ Consultant surgeon's contemporary experience of adverse surgical events
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‘Skating on thin ice?’ Consultant surgeon's contemporary experience of adverse surgical events

机译:“在薄冰上滑冰?”顾问外科医生在不良手术事件上的当代经验

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摘要

Concerns about patient safety have prompted studies of adverse surgical events (ASEs), but descriptive classification of errors and malpractice claims have overshadowed qualitative investigations into the processes that lead to expert errors and their solutions. We studied consultant surgeon's perspectives on how and why events occurred through semi-structured interviews about general and specific events. The sample contained heterogeneous cross-section of ages, gender and specialists, with 2 years consultant status and working within a 25-mile radius. Overarching findings included (1) pressures to work harder, faster and beyond capability within a blaming culture; (2) optimism bias from over-confidence and complacency; and (3) multiple pressures to ‘finish’ an operation or list, resulting in completion bias. Seven high order themes were identified on the healthcare system, adverse event types, contributing factors, emotions, cognitive processes, error detection, and strategies, solutions and barriers. The process of classifying event types guided solution selection, and the decision about whether to formally report it. How serious consequences were for patients and their temporal effects, defined an adversity continuum. Minor events arose routinely i.e. technical discrepancies, side-effects. More problematic were sub-optimal outcomes and avoidable events. Despite their expertise, consultants were vulnerable to unavoidable, uncontrollable events which were major concerns. Most serious were near-misses, errors and mistakes. However, major errors did not inevitably lead to a catastrophe and minor errors could be extremely serious. A ‘cascade’ of minor events exacerbated by negative emotions can precipitate major events, and interception methods need investigation. Consultants felt powerless and helpless to change environmental, organisational and systemic problems; new communication and action channels are desirable. Confidence building in team leadership would promote ‘flatter’ hierarchies, facilitating appropriate warnings. Although implementing the WHO Checklist averts important problems, social, environmental and organisational contributing factors are largely overlooked here and in existing models.View full textDownload full textKeywordssurgeon, consultant, adverse event, qualitative, error, processRelated var addthis_config = { ui_cobrand: "Taylor & Francis Online", services_compact: "citeulike,netvibes,twitter,technorati,delicious,linkedin,facebook,stumbleupon,digg,google,more", pubid: "ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b" }; Add to shortlist Link Permalink http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13548506.2011.592841
机译:对患者安全的担忧促使人们对不良手术事件(ASE)进行研究,但是对错误和描述不当的描述性分类已经使对导致专家错误及其解决方案的过程的定性研究蒙上了阴影。我们通过对一般事件和特定事件进行半结构化访谈,研究了顾问外科医生对事件发生的方式和原因的看法。该样本包含不同年龄,性别和专家的横截面,具有超过2年的顾问身份,并在25英里半径范围内工作。总体发现包括:(1)在责备文化中要更加努力,更快和超越能力的压力; (2)过度自信和自满情绪导致的乐观偏见; (3)“完成”一项操作或列表的多个压力,导致完成偏差。在医疗保健系统,不良事件类型,影响因素,情绪,认知过程,错误检测以及策略,解决方案和障碍方面确定了七个高级主题。事件类型的分类过程指导解决方案的选择,并决定是否正式报告它。对患者及其时间影响的严重程度定义了逆境连续性。例行事件通常是次要的,即技术差异,副作用。问题更多的是次优的结果和可避免的事件。尽管有专门知识,顾问仍然容易受到不可避免的,不可控制的事件的困扰,这是主要问题。最严重的是差错,错误和错误。但是,重大错误并不一定会导致灾难,较小的错误可能会非常严重。负面情绪加剧的“小瀑布”级联事件可引发大事件,拦截方法需要研究。顾问们感到无能为力,无法改变环境,组织和系统问题。需要新的沟通和行动渠道。建立团队领导的信心将促进“奉承”的层次结构,促进适当的警告。尽管实施WHO WHO Checklist避免了重大问题,但在这里和现有模型中却忽略了社会,环境和组织的影响因素。查看全文下载全文外科医生,顾问,不良事件,定性,错误,过程相关的var addthis_config = {ui_cobrand:“ Taylor&弗朗西斯在线”,services_compact:“ citeulike,netvibes,twitter,technorati,美味,linkedin,facebook,stumbleupon,digg,google,更多”,发布号:“ ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b”};添加到候选列表链接永久链接http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13548506.2011.592841

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