Literature DB >> 27025575

Using Coworker Observations to Promote Accountability for Disrespectful and Unsafe Behaviors by Physicians and Advanced Practice Professionals.

Lynn E Webb1, Roger R Dmochowski, Ilene N Moore, James W Pichert, Thomas F Catron, Michelle Troyer, William Martinez, William O Cooper, Gerald B Hickson.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Health care team members are well positioned to observe disrespectful and unsafe conduct-behaviors known to undermine team function. Based on experience in sharing patient complaints with physicians who subsequently achieved decreased complaints and malpractice risk, Vanderbilt University Medical Center developed and assessed the feasibility of the Co-Worker Observation Reporting System(SM) (CORS (SM)) for addressing coworkers' reported concerns.
METHODS: VUMC leaders used a "Project Bundle" readiness assessment, which entailed identification and development of key people, organizational supports, and systems. Methods involved gaining leadership buy-in, recruiting and training key individuals, aligning the project with organizational values and policies, promoting reporting, monitoring reports, and employing a tiered intervention process to address reported coworker concerns.
RESULTS: Peer messengers shared coworker reports with the physicians and advanced practice professionals associated with at least one report 84% of the time. Since CORS inception, 3% of the medical staff was associated with a pattern of CORS reports, and 71% of recipients of pattern-related interventions were not named in any subsequent reports in a one-year follow-up period.
CONCLUSIONS: Systematic monitoring of documented co-worker observations about unprofessional conduct and sharing that information with involved professionals are feasible. Feasibility requires organizationwide implementation; co-workers willing and able to share respectful, nonjudgmental, timely feedback designed initially to encourage self-reflection; and leadership committed to be more directive if needed. Follow-up surveillance indicates that the majority of professionals "self-regulate" after receiving CORS data.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27025575     DOI: 10.1016/s1553-7250(16)42019-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf        ISSN: 1553-7250


  7 in total

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Authors:  Allison Lipitz-Snyderman; Minal Kale; Laura Robbins; David Pfister; Elizabeth Fortier; Valerie Pocus; Susan Chimonas; Saul N Weingart
Journal:  BMJ Qual Saf       Date:  2017-06-27       Impact factor: 7.035

3.  Student-derived solutions to address barriers hindering reports of unprofessional behaviour.

Authors:  Jaden R Kohn; Joseph M Armstrong; Rachel A Taylor; Diana L Whitney; Anne C Gill
Journal:  Med Educ       Date:  2017-04-18       Impact factor: 6.251

4.  Association of Coworker Reports About Unprofessional Behavior by Surgeons With Surgical Complications in Their Patients.

Authors:  William O Cooper; David A Spain; Oscar Guillamondegui; Rachel R Kelz; Henry J Domenico; Joseph Hopkins; Patricia Sullivan; Ilene N Moore; James W Pichert; Thomas F Catron; Lynn E Webb; Roger R Dmochowski; Gerald B Hickson
Journal:  JAMA Surg       Date:  2019-09-01       Impact factor: 14.766

5.  Gotcha! Using Patient Safety Event Reports to Report People Rather Than Problems.

Authors:  Jennifer S Myers; Jo Shapiro; Ilene M Rosen
Journal:  J Grad Med Educ       Date:  2020-10

6.  Improving Employee Voice About Transgressive or Disruptive Behavior: A Case Study.

Authors:  Mary Dixon-Woods; Anne Campbell; Graham Martin; Janet Willars; Carolyn Tarrant; Emma-Louise Aveling; Kathleen Sutcliffe; Janice Clements; Michelle Carlstrom; Peter Pronovost
Journal:  Acad Med       Date:  2019-04       Impact factor: 6.893

7.  Exploring unnecessary invasive procedures in the United States: a retrospective mixed-methods analysis of cases from 2008-2016.

Authors:  James M DuBois; John T Chibnall; Emily E Anderson; Heidi A Walsh; Michelle Eggers; Kari Baldwin; Kelly K Dineen
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  7 in total

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