Open AccessJournal Article
Medical errors involving trainees : A study of closed malpractice claims from 5 insurers. Commentaries
Robert A. Phillips,Julia D. Andrieni,Hardeep Singh,Eric J. Thomas,Laura A. Petersen,David M. Studdert +5 more
386
TL;DR: House staff are particularly vulnerable to medical errors owing to teamwork failures, especially lack of supervision, and Graduate medical education reform should focus on strengthening these aspects of training.
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Abstract: Background: Despite wide recognition that the delivery of medical care by trainees involves special risks, information about the types and causes of medical errors involving trainees is limited. To describe the characteristics of and factors contributing to trainee errors, we analyzed malpractice claims in which trainees were judged to have played an important role in harmful errors. Methods: The claims were closed between 1984 and 2004, and the errors occurred between 1979 and 2001. Specialist physicians reviewed random samples of closed malpractice claim files at 5 liability insurers from 2002 to 2004 and determined whether injuries had occurred, and if so, whether they were due to error. We described the clinical circumstances and contributing factors associated with harmful errors involving trainees ("cases"). We also compared the characteristics of cases with their nontrainee counterparts and probed trainee errors attributed to teamwork problems and lack of technical competence or knowledge. Results: Among 240 cases, errors in judgment (173 of 240 [72%]),teamwork breakdowns (167 of 240 [70%]), and lack of technical competence (139 of 240 [58%]) were the most prevalent contributing factors. Lack of supervision and handoff problems were most prevalent types of teamwork problems, and both were disproportionately more common among errors that involved trainees than those that did not (respectively, 54% vs 7% [P<.001] and 20% vs 12% [P=.009]). The most common task during which failures of technical competence occurred were diagnostic decision making and monitoring of the patient or situation. Trainee errors appeared more complex than nontrainee errors (mean of 3.8 contributing factors vs 2.5 [P<.001]). Conclusions: In addition to problems with handoffs, house staff are particularly vulnerable to medical errors owing to teamwork failures, especially lack of supervision. Graduate medical education reform should focus on strengthening these aspects of training.
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Citations
Factors and impact of physicians' diagnostic errors in malpractice claims in Japan
Takashi Watari,Yasuharu Tokuda,Shohei Mitsuhashi,Kazuya Otuki,Kaori Kono,Nobuhiro Nagai,Kazumichi Onigata,Hideyuki Kanda +7 more
TL;DR: Cases of diagnostic errors produced severe patient outcomes and were associated with high indemnity in cases of diagnostic error cases closed between 1961 and 2017, using Japan’s largest database of national claims.
Perceived Quality of Postoperative Handover by Saudi Nurses: A Single-Center Cross-Sectional Study
Somayah Mohsen Mohammed Al-Qarni,Hala Mohamed Mohamed Bayoumy,Dalyal Alosaimi +2 more
TL;DR: Evaluating nurses' perceptions of postoperative handover quality and assessing factors impacting this process provided findings that could direct future improvements in nursing handover practice to ensure high-quality patient care.
Lessons learnt from incidents reported by postgraduate trainees in Dutch general practice. A prospective cohort study
Dorien L M Zwart,Wendelien Heddema,Margit I Vermeulen,Elizabeth L J van Rensen,Theo J M Verheij,Cor J. Kalkman +5 more
TL;DR: GP trainees rated highly by their faculty voluntarily reported incidents in the delivery of clinical care when given a safe, blame-free, and confidential reporting process.
Equity in Handoff Practices: A Qualitative Project on Handoffs of Patients with Limited English Proficiency
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Large-scale implementation of the I-PASS handover system at an academic medical centre
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