Surgical residents as "second victims" following exposure to medical errors in a tertiary health training facility in Nigeria: a phenomenology study.

IF 2.6 Q1 SURGERY Patient Safety in Surgery Pub Date : 2023-07-18 DOI:10.1186/s13037-023-00370-z
James Ayokunle Balogun, Adefisayo Ayoade Adekanmbi, Folusho Mubowale Balogun
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Abstract

Introduction: The "second victim" phenomenon refers to the distress and other negative consequences that physicians experience when they commit medical error. There has been increasing awareness about this phenomenon and efforts are being made to address it. However, there is dearth of information about it in developing countries. This study explored the experiences of surgical resident doctors of the University College Hospital in Ibadan, Nigeria about the "second victim" phenomenon and the support they had following medical errors.

Methods: This is a phenomenology study in which qualitative data were obtained from interviews with 31 resident doctors across 10 surgical units/departments. Interviews were transcribed verbatim, and data were coded inductively. Data were analyzed using content analysis method. Themes and subthemes were generated using axial coding. The themes were then integrated using selective coding.

Results: There were 31 participants and 10(32.3%) were females. All had witnessed other physicians encountering medical errors while 28(90.3%) had been directly involved in medical errors. Most of the errors were at the inter-operative stage. Prolonged work hours with inadequate sleep were identified as major causes of most medical errors. The feelings following medical errors were all negative and was described as 'stressful'. Most of the residents got support from their colleagues, mostly contemporaries following medical errors, and many viewed medical errors as a learning point to improve their practice. However, there was a general belief that the systemic support following medical errors was inadequate.

Conclusion: The "second victim" phenomenon was common among the study group with consequent negative effects. Normalizing discussions about medical errors, reduction of work hours and meticulous intraoperative guidance may reduce medical errors and its consequences on the surgical residents. Steps should be taken within the system to address this issue effectively.

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尼日利亚三级保健培训机构医疗差错暴露后外科住院医生的"第二受害者":现象学研究。
引言:“第二受害者”现象是指医生在犯医疗错误时所经历的痛苦和其他负面后果。人们越来越认识到这一现象,并正在努力解决这一问题。然而,发展中国家缺乏这方面的信息。本研究探讨了尼日利亚伊巴丹大学学院医院外科住院医生关于"第二受害者"现象的经验以及他们在医疗事故后得到的支持。方法:这是一项现象学研究,从10个外科单位/部门的31名住院医生的访谈中获得定性数据。访谈被逐字记录,数据被归纳编码。采用内容分析法对数据进行分析。主题和子主题使用轴向编码生成。然后使用选择性编码对主题进行整合。结果:共31例,其中女性10例,占32.3%。所有人都目睹了其他医生遇到医疗事故,28人(90.3%)直接参与了医疗事故。大多数错误发生在手术间期。长时间工作和睡眠不足被认为是大多数医疗事故的主要原因。医疗事故后的感觉都是负面的,被描述为“压力”。大多数住院医生得到了同事的支持,他们大多是医疗事故后的同龄人,许多人将医疗事故视为一个学习点,以改善他们的实践。然而,人们普遍认为,医疗事故后的系统支持是不够的。结论:“第二受害者”现象在研究组中普遍存在,并有相应的负面影响。规范医疗差错的讨论,减少工作时间和细致的术中指导可以减少医疗差错及其对外科住院医师的影响。应在联合国系统内采取步骤,有效地处理这一问题。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
8.10%
发文量
37
审稿时长
9 weeks
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