Literature DB >> 26352764

Wisdom in Medicine: What Helps Physicians After a Medical Error?

Margaret Plews-Ogan1, Natalie May, Justine Owens, Monika Ardelt, Jo Shapiro, Sigall K Bell.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Confronting medical error openly is critical to organizational learning, but less is known about what helps individual clinicians learn and adapt positively after making a harmful mistake. Understanding what factors help doctors gain wisdom can inform educational and peer support programs, and may facilitate the development of specific tools to assist doctors after harmful errors occur.
METHOD: Using "posttraumatic growth" as a model, the authors conducted semistructured interviews (2009-2011) with 61 physicians who had made a serious medical error. Interviews were recorded, professionally transcribed, and coded by two study team members (kappa 0.8) using principles of grounded theory and NVivo software. Coders also scored interviewees as wisdom exemplars or nonexemplars based on Ardelt's three-dimensional wisdom model.
RESULTS: Of the 61 physicians interviewed, 33 (54%) were male, and on average, eight years had elapsed since the error. Wisdom exemplars were more likely to report disclosing the error to the patient/family (69%) than nonexemplars (38%); P < .03. Fewer than 10% of all participants reported receiving disclosure training. Investigators identified eight themes reflecting what helped physician wisdom exemplars cope positively: talking about it, disclosure and apology, forgiveness, a moral context, dealing with imperfection, learning/becoming an expert, preventing recurrences/improving teamwork, and helping others/teaching.
CONCLUSIONS: The path forged by doctors who coped well with medical error highlights specific ways to help clinicians move through this difficult experience so that they avoid devastating professional outcomes and have the best chance of not just recovery but positive growth.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26352764     DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000000886

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  10 in total

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3.  "Everybody in this room can understand": A qualitative exploration of peer support during residency training.

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4.  A Professional Development Workshop to Facilitate Self-Forgiveness.

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Journal:  J Grad Med Educ       Date:  2020-06

5.  How do doctors in the Netherlands perceive the impact of disciplinary procedures and disclosure of disciplinary measures on their professional practice, health and career opportunities? A questionnaire among medical doctors who received a disciplinary measure.

Authors:  Berber S Laarman; Renée Jr Bouwman; Anke Je de Veer; Michelle Hendriks; Roland D Friele
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6.  Encouraging Resident Adverse Event Reporting: A Qualitative Study of Suggestions from the Front Lines.

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7.  Toward Constructive Change After Making a Medical Error: Recovery From Situations of Error Theory as a Psychosocial Model for Clinician Recovery.

Authors:  Reema Harrison; Judith Johnson; Ryan D McMullan; Maha Pervaz-Iqbal; Upma Chitkara; Steve Mears; Jo Shapiro; Rebecca Lawton
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8.  Long-Term Impacts Faced by Patients and Families After Harmful Healthcare Events.

Authors:  Madelene J Ottosen; Emily W Sedlock; Aitebureme O Aigbe; Sigall K Bell; Thomas H Gallagher; Eric J Thomas
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9.  Building Team Resilience and Debriefing After Difficult Clinical Events: A Resilience Curriculum for Team Leaders.

Authors:  Michelle Martinchek; Amber Bird; Amber T Pincavage
Journal:  MedEdPORTAL       Date:  2017-07-12

10.  Is the perceived impact of disciplinary procedures on medical doctors' professional practice associated with working in an open culture and feeling supported? A questionnaire among medical doctors in the Netherlands who have been disciplined.

Authors:  Berber S Laarman; Renée J R Bouwman; Anke J E de Veer; Roland D Friele
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2020-11-26       Impact factor: 2.692

  10 in total

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