| Literature DB >> 31106086 |
Jennifer Mitzman1, Christian Jones2, Shannon McNamara3, Megan Stobart-Gallagher4, Andrew King1.
Abstract
Second victim syndrome (SVS) is defined as the psychological or emotional suffering of healthcare workers as a result of a patient adverse, or near miss, event. Initially thought to be related to medical error, we now recognize that SVS can result from a much wider range of circumstances including adverse pediatric patient events, unanticipated deaths, or patients well known to the provider. Residents are particularly susceptible to SVS yet relatively little is written about this topic targeted at their educators. Since educators are positioned to help recognize and guide learners through the experience, this paper targets that reader audience. In this article, we identify and summarize five key papers relevant to educators interested in learning more about SVS as it relates to learners. We identified an extensive list of papers relevant to SVS via online discussions within the Academic Life in Emergency Medicine (ALiEM) Faculty Incubator. The Faculty Incubator is a digital community of practice providing professional development for educators. This list was augmented by an open call on Twitter seen by over 2000 people and yielding a list of 31 papers. We then conducted a three-round modified Delphi process within the authorship group, which included both junior and senior clinician educators, to identify the most impactful papers for educators interested in SVS. The three-round modified Delphi process ranked all papers submitted for review and used iterative rounds to select the five highest-rated papers for inclusion in this article. The group then summarized each of the five papers with specific consideration for junior faculty educators and faculty developers with an interest in SVS in learners. The five papers featured in this article serve as a key reading list for educators across specialties interested in SVS and our commentary provides context for medical educators using the articles.Entities:
Keywords: curated collection; faculty development; junior educators; medical education; modified delphi; resilience; second victim syndrome; wellness
Year: 2019 PMID: 31106086 PMCID: PMC6504017 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.4186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1The six stages of the second victim recovery trajectory
Figure 2Three-round Delphi methodology
The complete list of educational scholarship literature collected by the authorship team
| Citation | Round 1: Initial mean scores (SD) max score 7 | Round 2: % of raters who endorsed this paper | Round 3: % of raters who endorsed this paper | Top 5 papers |
| Marmon LM, Heiss K: Improving surgeon wellness: the second victim syndrome and quality of care. Seminars in Pediatric Surgery. 2015, 24: 315-318. | 6.2 (0.84) | 100% | 100% | 1 |
| Tamburri LM: Creating healthy work environments for second victims of adverse events. AACN. 2017, 28: 366-374. | 5.6 (0.89) | 100% | 80% | 2 |
| Wuthnow J, Elwell S, Quillen J M, Ciancaglione N: Implementing an ED critical incident stress management team. Journal of Emergency Nursing. 2016, 42: 474-480. | 6.4 (0.89) | 80% | 80% | 3 |
| Edrees H, Connors C, Paine L, Norvell M, Taylor H, Wu AW: Implementing the RISE second victim support programme at the Johns Hopkins Hospital: a case study. BMJ open. 2016, 6: e011708. | 6.2 (1.79) | 80% | 80% | 4 |
| Pratt SD, Jachna BR: Care of the clinician after an adverse event. International Journal of Obstetric Anesthesia. 2015, 24: 54-63. | 6 (1) | 80% | 80% | 5 |
| Han K, Bohnen JD, Peponis T, et al.: The surgeon as the second victim? Results of the Boston intraoperative adverse events surgeons' attitude (BISA) study. Journal of the American College of Surgeons. 2017, 224: 1048-1056. | 6 (1.22) | 80% | 20% | |
| Seys D, Scott S, Wu A, et al.: Supporting involved health care professionals (second victims) following an adverse health event: a literature review. International Journal of Nursing Studies. 2013, 50: 678-687. | 5.8 (1.64) | 40% | 0% | |
| Rodriguez J, Scott SD: When clinicians drop out and start over after adverse events. Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety. 2018, 44: 137-145. | 5.4 (0.89) | 40% | 20% | |
| Clancy CM: Alleviating “second victim” syndrome: how we should handle patient harm. Journal of Nursing Care Quality. 2012, 27: 1-5. | 5.4 (0.55) | 80% | 20% | |
| Wu A: The unity of medical errors. Journal of Patient Safety and Risk Management. 2018, 23(2): 49-50. | 5.4 (1.34) | 20% | 0% | |
| Gispen F, Wu A: Psychological first aid: CPR for mental health crises in healthcare. Journal of Patient Safety and Risk Management. 2018, 23: 51-53. | 5.2 (2.17) | 40% | 0% | |
| Hammond J, Brooks J: The world trade center attack helping the helpers: the role of critical incident stress management. Critical Care. 2001, 5: 315-317. | 5 (1.22) | 20% | 0% | |
| Davidson JE, Agan DL, Chakedis S, Skrobik Y: Workplace blame and related concepts: an analysis of three case studies. Chest. 2015, 148: 543-549. | 5 (0.71) | 60% | 0% | |
| Elwahab SA, Doherty E: What about doctors? The impact of medical errors. The Surgeon. 2014, 12: 297-300. | 4.8 (1.48) | 60% | 0% | |
| Regel S: Post-trauma support in the workplace: the current status and practice of critical incident stress management (CISM) and psychological debriefing (PD) within organizations in the UK. Occupational Medicine. 2007, 57: 411-416. | 4.8 (1.48) | 20% | 0% | |
| Treatment of PTSD - PTSD: National Center for PTSD (2007). Accessed 10/03/2018. | 4.6 (2.07) | 40% | 20% | |
| Pratt S, Kenney L, Scott SD, Wu AW: (2012). How to develop a second victim support program: a toolkit for health care organizations. Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety. 2012, 38: 235-240. | 4.4 (1.95) | 0% | ||
| Coughlan B, Powell D, Higgins MF: The second victim: a review. European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology. 2017, 213: 11-16. | 4.4 (0.55) | 0% | ||
| Sending Out an SOS. (2018). Accessed 10/03/2018. | 4.2 (0.84) | 0% | ||
| Eklöf M, Törner M, Pousette A: Organizational and social-psychological conditions in healthcare and their importance for patient and staff safety. A critical incident study among doctors and nurses. Safety Science. 2014, 70: 211-221. | 3.8 (2.17) | 0% | ||
| Greenberg N: A critical review of psychological debriefing and a proposal for the future. Journal of the Royal Naval Medical Service 2001, 87: 158-61. [ | 3.8 (0.45) | 0% | ||
| Lane MA, Newman BM, Taylor MZ, O'Neill M, Ghetti C, Woltman RM, Waterman AD: Supporting clinicians after adverse events: development of a clinician peer support program. Journal of Patient Safety. 2018, 14: e56-e60. | 3.6 (2.19) | 0% | ||
| Quillivan RR, Burlison JD, Browne EK, Scott SD, Hoffman JM: Patient safety culture and the second victim phenomenon: connecting culture to staff distress in nurses. The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety. 2016, 42: 377-384. | 3.6 (1.14) | 0% | ||
| Treiber LA, Jones JH: Making an infusion error. Journal of Infusion Nursing. 2018, 41: 156-163. | 3.4 (0.89) | 0% | ||
| Schrøder K, la Cour K, Jørgensen JS, Lamont RF, Hvidt NC: Guilt without fault: a qualitative study into the ethics of forgiveness after traumatic childbirth. Social Science & Medicine. 2017, 176: 14-20. | 3.4 (1.14) | 0% | ||
| Grissinger M. Too many abandon the “second victims” of medical errors. Pharmacy and Therapeutics. 2014, 39: 591. [ | 3.4 (1.52) | 0% | ||
| Bisson JI: Psychological debriefing for adults. Effective treatments for PTSD: Practice Guidelines from the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies. Foa E (ed): Guilford Press, 2008. 2: 83-105. [ | 3.4 (1.34) | 0% | ||
| Chung AS, Smart J, Zdradzinski M, Roth S, Gende A, Conroy K, Battaglioli N: Educator toolkits on second victim syndrome, mindfulness and meditation, and positive psychology: The 2017 Resident Wellness Consensus Summit. Western Journal of Emergency Medicine. 2018, 19: 327-331. | 3 (2.55) | 0% | ||
| Davis J: Critical incident stress debriefing from a traumatic event. Psychology Today. 2013, Accessed: 10/03/2018: | 2.8 (1.48) | 0% | ||
| Müller-Leonhardt A, Mitchell SG, Vogt J, Schürmann T: Critical Incident Stress Management (CISM) in complex systems: cultural adaptation and safety impacts in healthcare. Accident Analysis & Prevention. 2014, 68: 172-180. | 2.8 (2.39) | 0% | ||
| A primer on critical incident stress management (CISM). (2003). Accessed 10/03/2018: | 2.4 (0.55) | 0% |