| Literature DB >> 29678988 |
John Jolly1, Paul Bowie2, Julie Price1, Matt Mason1, Mark Dinwoodie1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The Medical Protection Society (MPS) is a leading protection organisation for healthcare professionals worldwide. In the UK and Ireland, a small minority of MPS members experience significantly more medicolegal cases than their peers and are invited to participate in a risk education (RE) remediation process. To understand more about this educational intervention, we sought to explore participating doctors' views of their experiences of this process and identify self-reported performance improvements and what elements of the intervention could be improved.Entities:
Keywords: change management; clinical governance; risk management
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29678988 PMCID: PMC5914717 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-020838
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Personal and professional characteristics of study participants
| Characteristic | n=20, n (%) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 19 (95) |
| Female | 1 (5) |
| Age | |
| Median: 50.5 years | Range: 38–68 years |
| Medical specialty | |
| General practice | 16 (80) |
| Trauma and orthopaedics | 2 (10) |
| General surgery | 1 (5) |
| Urology | 1 (5) |
Break down of the number of risk education (RE) programmes completed by participating study doctors
| Participant ID | MRR | CCP | Risk education workshops | ||||
| Medical records for GPs | Mastering adverse outcomes | Mastering shared decision making | Medication errors and safer prescribing | Mastering your risk | |||
| 1 | X | X | X | X | X | – | |
| 7 | X | – | X | X | – | – | |
| 14 | X | X | X | X | X | X | |
| 16 | X | X | – | X | X | – | |
| 17 | X | X | – | X | X | X | |
| 18 | X | X | X | X | X | X | |
| 28 | X | – | X | X | – | – | X |
| 29 | X | – | – | – | – | X | – |
| 31 | X | – | X | X | – | X | X |
| 33 | X | X | – | X | X | – | – |
| 34 | X | – | – | X | X | – | – |
| 35 | X | X | X | X | X | – | – |
| 36 | X | X | – | X | X | – | – |
| 39 | X | – | – | X | X | – | – |
| 51 | X | – | X | – | – | – | – |
| 53 | X | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| 54 | X | X | – | X | X | – | – |
| 60 | X | X | – | X | X | – | – |
| 64 | X | X | – | X | X | – | – |
| 77 | X | X | – | X | X | – | – |
| Total (n, %) | 20 | 12 | 8 | 17 | 14 | 5 | 2 |
CCP, Clinical Communication Programme; MRR, Member Risk Review; X, completed.
Details of each result theme, linked categories, theory and supporting quotations.
| Theme (categories) | Selected verbatim quote |
| 1. Personal and professional impacts and actions behavioural change in personal work circumstances linked to MRR action on MRR recommendations made behavioural change linked to the Clinical Communication Programme (CCP) recognised benefits following changes changes in personal and professional circumstances/contexts since MRR | ‘The change of my attitude, not only to look at myself, my feelings, I think the best is to put myself in the patient’s shoes’. Dr 17, GP |
| 2. Comprehension and validity of intervention personal understanding of causes of medicolegal cases understanding/misunderstanding of education process and implications relevance of MRR process to self sharing report findings with others | ‘If you don’t explain to them that look, we really do want to make your system safer, it almost, sort of, feels like an investigation’. Dr 36, GP |
| 3. Feedback and proposals perceptions of the MPS MRR facilitator perceptions of MRR usefulness members suggestions to improve the MRR process. | ‘Helpful, wise, experienced, very approachable, friendly, head teacher, lovely chap, personable, professional, pastoral, identify with, neutral, not intimidating’. |
GP, general practitioner; MPS, Medical Protection Society; MRR, Member Risk Review.
Participating GP doctors reported key recommended actions grouped as examples
| Key recommended action | Completed | Not completed (ID number) | Barriers for non-completion |
| Review and update repeat prescribing policies | 1, 7, 17, 33, 34, 35, 36 | ||
| Improve processes for conducting significant event audits | 17, 18, 31, 34, 35, 54 | ||
| Use electronic workflow systems so that all activities required by letters, telephone and messages are completed, and there is an audit trail of the actions taken | 1,7, 29, 33, 35 | 17, 28, 31 33 | Delays in the practices installing computer system to record all messages |
| Improve processes for recording consent | 16, 34, 51, 54 | ||
| Improve record keeping, in particular recording of safety netting advice | 17, 35, 51 | ||
| Record the use of chaperones in the medical records | 14,16, 36, | 51 | Not always offered chaperone for male patients |
| Update practice leaflet | 18, 31, 34 | ||
| Maintain control over personal workload | 54, 60 | 18, 34 | Unable to recruit extra doctors/nurses |
| Ensure all indemnity arrangements in place | 33, 51 | ||
| Change and implement practice policy for handling test results more safely | 14 | ||
| Ensure practice protocols are dated reviewed and old ones archived | 34 | ||
| Change pattern of working out of hours at night to ensure not working the next day | 1 | ||
| Attend recommended group sessions for personal health reasons | 16 | ||
| To continue locum work safely, focus work on GP surgeries that have worked at before | 16 | ||
| Design system to make sure certain medications required to treat medical emergencies in the community are to hand | 29 | ||
| Review confidentiality issues relating to text messaging | 35 | ||
| Introduce use of voice-activated dictation software to speed up the process of electronic record keeping | 51 |
GP, general practitioner.
Participating consultant doctors reported key recommended actions grouped as examples
| Key recommended action | Completed | Not completed (consultant ID number) | Barriers for non-completion |
| Improve processes for recording consent | 53, 64 | ||
| Ensure all indemnity arrangements in place | 39, 53 | ||
| Improve record keeping, in particular recording of safety netting advice | 64 | ||
| Improve processes for conducting significant event audits | 77 | ||
| Record the use of chaperones in the medical records | 77 | 64 | Always had a chaperone so did not record in medical records |
| Maintain control over personal workload | 53 | 64 | Unable to recruit secretary |
| Ensure practice protocols are dated reviewed and old ones archived | 39 | ||
| Use standard preoperative consent forms/equipment | 39, 64, 77 | Required to use different consent forms/equipment as worked in more than one private hospital | |
| Removed information displayed on website without patient consent | 39 | ||
| Ensured reservations of surgical facilities at private hospital | 39 | ||
| Have a well-advertised complaints procedure for patients and families | 39 | ||
| Offered timely follow-up consultations | 53 | 53 | Partially met, dependent on length of NHS waiting lists |
| Completed child protection training | 53 |
NHS, National Health Services.