| Literature DB >> 28444089 |
João Lucas Campos de Oliveira1, Simone Viana da Silva1, Pamela Regina Dos Santos1, Laura Misue Matsuda2, Nelsi Salete Tonini1, Anair Lazzari Nicola1.
Abstract
Objective: To assess the knowledge of multiprofesional residents in health about the security of the patient theme.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28444089 PMCID: PMC5433307 DOI: 10.1590/S1679-45082017AO3871
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Einstein (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1679-4508
Sample characterization
| Variable | n (%) |
|---|---|
| Age | |
| 20-23 | 24 (30.7) |
| 24-27 | 41 (52.5) |
| 28-31 | 9 (11.5) |
| 32-35 | 3 (3.8) |
| Did not answer | 1 (1.5) |
| Gender | |
| Female | 53 (67.9) |
| Male | 25 (32.1) |
| Years of residency training | |
| R1 | 53 (67.9) |
| R2 | 22 (28.3) |
| R3 | 3 (3.8) |
| Major | |
| Medicine | 29 (37.2) |
| Nursing | 13 (16.7) |
| Physiotherapy | 15 (19.2) |
| Pharmacy | 15 (19.2) |
| Dentistry | 6 (7.7) |
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| Total | 78 (100) |
Respondents’ specialties
| Residency specialty | n (%) |
|---|---|
| General Surgery | 4 (5.1) |
| Internal Medicine | 3 (3.9) |
| Neurosurgery | 2 (2.5) |
| Obstetrics and Gynecology | 11 (14.1) |
| Orthopedics and Traumatology | 3 (3.9) |
| Pediatrics | 6 (7.6) |
| Medical/Surgical Nursing Management | 13 (16.6) |
| Inpatient Physiotherapy | 10 (12.8) |
| Physiotherapy in intensive care | 5 (6.5) |
| Clinical Analysis. | 3 (3.9) |
| Hospital Pharmacy | 9 (11.6) |
| Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery and Traumatology | 6 (7.6) |
| Industrial Pharmacy | 3 (3.9) |
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| Total | 78 (100) |
Knowledge of patient safety among multiprofessional residents
| Subject of the question | Correct answers n (%) | Incorrect answers n (%) | Total n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purpose of the PNSP | 72 (92.3) | 6 (7.7) | 78 (100) |
| Risk of infection | 63 (80.8) | 15 (19.2) | 78 (100) |
| Primary patient safety goals (ANVISA) | 66 (84.7) | 12 (15.3) | 78 (100) |
| Times when hand washing is required | 77 (98.8) | 1 (1.2) | 78 (100) |
| Safe surgery checklist | 55 (70.5) | 23 (29.5) | 78 (100) |
| Patient safety taxonomy (mistakes and adverse events) | 47 (60.2) | 31 (39.8) | 78 (100) |
| Pressure ulcers | 60 (77) | 18 (23) | 78 (100) |
| Patient identification | 29 (37.7) | 48 (62.3) | 77 (100)* |
| Fall prevention | 57 (74) | 20 (26) | 77 (100)* |
* Blank items were not considered.
PNSP: Programa Nacional de Segurança do Paciente; ANVISA: Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária.
Knowledge about patient safety among multiprofessional residents, by professional area
| Major | Correct answers n (%) | Incorrect answers n (%) | Total n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medicine | 191 (73.8) | 68 (26.2) | 259 (100) |
| Nursing | 105 (89.8) | 12 (10.2) | 117 (100) |
| Physiotherapy | 100 (74) | 35 (26) | 135 (100) |
| Pharmacy | 96 (71) | 39 (29) | 135 (100) |
| Dentistry | 34 (63) | 20 (37) | 54 (100) |
Data Collection Form
| Instructions for completing the questionnaire | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| This questionnaire will assess your knowledge of patient safety. Please sign the informed consent form, fill out some details of your residency training and then answer a few questions about patient safety. Completing this questionnaire should take between 10 and 15 minutes. | |||
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| 3) Years of residency: | |||
| [ ] R1 [ ] R2 [ ]R3 [ ]R4 [ ] R5 | |||
| 4) What is your residency program? | |||
| a) Medicine [ ] | |||
| b) Nursing [ ] | |||
| c) Physical therapy [ ] | |||
| d) Pharmacy [ ] | |||
| e) Dentistry [ ] | |||
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| a) General Surgery [ ] | |||
| b) Internal Medicine [ ] | |||
| c) Neurosurgery [ ] | |||
| d) Obstetrics and Gynecology [ ] | |||
| e) Orthopedics and Traumatology [ ] | |||
| f) Pediatrics [ ] | |||
| g) Cardiology [ ] | |||
| h) Medical/Surgical Nursing Management [ ] | |||
| i) Hospital Physiotherapy [ ] | |||
| j) Physiotherapy in intensive care [ ] | |||
| k) Clinical Analysis [ ] | |||
| l) Hospital Pharmacy [ ] | |||
| m) Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery and Traumatology [ ] | |||
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| a) To promote and support the implementation of patient safety initiatives in different areas of provision, organization and management of health care services. | |||
| b) To promote the inclusion of patient safety as a topic in higher education in health care. | |||
| c) Make patients take on responsibility for their safety as primary providers. | |||
| d) Build commitment and give priority to reducing infections. | |||
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| a) Explaining that the power to reduce health care-associated infections is in the hands of patients only. | |||
| b) Increasing awareness of the impact of health care-associated infections in order to reduce their incidence. | |||
| c) Minimizing the importance of other sources of infections, since the primary cause is poor or no hand washing. | |||
| d) Strictly following protocols in order to reduce the number of health care-associated infections reported. | |||
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| a) Hand washing, patient identification, effective communication; saving lives. | |||
| b) Fall prevention, pressure ulcer prevention, safe drug administration, safe use of intravenous devices, ICC. | |||
| c) Safe surgical procedures, safe administration of blood and blood products, safe use of equipment, patient monitoring and hygiene. | |||
| d) Correct patient identification, improving communication skills of health care professionals, hand washing, safe drug administration, safe surgical procedures, reducing the risk of falls and pressure ulcers. | |||
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| a) Before any contact with the patient, before performing aseptic procedures, after potential exposure to body fluids, after any contact with the patient, and after any contact with areas close to the patient. | |||
| b) Before any contact with the patient, before performing septic procedures, and after potential exposure to body fluids. | |||
| c) Before any contact with the patient if needed, in case of procedures requiring contact with body fluids, and before performing aseptic procedures. | |||
| d) Before any contact with isolated patients, after any contact with the patient; if wearing gloves, there is no need for hand washing. | |||
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| a) A single checklist that cannot be adapted to particularities of the service and is used at three different times: before induction of anesthesia, before the surgical incision, and before the patient leaves the operating suite. | |||
| b) A single checklist that can be adapted to particularities of the service and is mostly applied at two different times: before induction of anesthesia and before the patient leaves the operating suite. | |||
| c) A single checklist that can be adapted to particularities of the service and is used at three different times: before induction of anesthesia, before the surgical incision, and before the patient leaves the operating suite. | |||
| d) A single checklist that cannot be adapted to particularities of the service and is used at four different times: before surgical induction, before the skin incision, before the patient leaves the operating suite, and after the patient is transferred back to the apartment. | |||
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| a) An incident without injury is an event that did not affect the patient and caused no discernible damage. | |||
| b) An adverse event is an event or circumstance that occurs sporadically, without directly affecting the patient. | |||
| c) A near miss is an incident that affected the patient. | |||
| d) A mistake is defined as a failure to execute an action plan as intended, or implementation of the wrong plan. | |||
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| a) It has four stages, namely: (I) intact skin with non-blanchable erythema, (II) partial loss of skin thickness, (iii) total loss of skin thickness, (iv) complete loss of tissue thickness with exposed bones, tendons and/or muscles. | |||
| b) The wound can progress until it is covered by a thin layer of necrotic tissue (eschar). Its evolution is slow without exposing other layers of tissue. | |||
| c) The depth of a stage IV pressure ulcer does not necessarily vary at different anatomical sites. They are often cavitated and fistulized. | |||
| d) There is no scale to assess the risk of developing pressure ulcers, the only recommendation is a daily physical examination of the patient. | |||
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| a) At least one identifier printed on a white or other color bracelet according to the institution’s standard. | |||
| b) At least two identifiers on a standardized white bracelet placed on one of the patient’s limb for checking before any procedure. | |||
| c) The bed and chart number are the recommended identifiers to be printed on the patient’s bracelet. | |||
| d) Colored alert bracelets or tags may be used to identify the patient, because their good visibility helps reduce the risk of misidentification. | |||
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| a) Fall risk is assessed only at patient admission using a scale deemed appropriate for the profile of the institution’s patients. | |||
| b) The fall risk assessment scales are universal to all patient groups, | |||
| c) The most commonly used scale is the Morse scale. It assesses the factors leading to falls, allowing for the rating of a patient’s risk of falling and implementation of measures required to eliminate this risk. | |||
| d) The health care facility is not responsible for providing resources for fall prevention, which is the exclusive responsibility of the staff. | |||
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| 6 | A | ||
| 7 | B | ||
| 8 | D | ||
| 9 | A | ||
| 10 | C | ||
| 11 | D | ||
| 12 | A | ||
| 13 | B | ||
| 14 | C | ||