| Literature DB >> 22653722 |
N von Laue1, D Schwappach, M Hochreutener.
Abstract
Medical errors do not only harm patients ("first victims"). Almost all health care professionals become a so-called "second victim" once in their career by being involved in a medical error. Studies show that error involvement can have a tremendous impact on health care workers leading to burnout, depression and professional crisis. Moreover persons involved in errors show a decline in job performance and jeopardize therefore patient safety. Blaming the person is one of the typical psychological reactions after an error happened as the attribution theory tells. The self-esteem gets stabilized if we can put blame on someone and pick out a scapegoat. But standing alone makes the emotional situation even worse. A vicious circle can evolve with tragic effect for the individual and negative implications for patient safety and the health care setting.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22653722 DOI: 10.1024/0040-5930/a000300
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Umsch ISSN: 0040-5930