Literature DB >> 31335816

What Do I Do When Something Goes Wrong? Teaching Medical Students to Identify, Understand, and Engage in Reporting Medical Errors.

Hilary F Ryder1, Jonathan T Huntington, Alan West, Greg Ogrinc.   

Abstract

PROBLEM: Identifying and processing medical errors are overlooked components of undergraduate medical education. Organizations and leaders advocate teaching medical students about patient safety and medical error, yet few feasible examples demonstrate how this teaching should occur. To provide students with familiarity in identifying, reporting, and analyzing medical errors, the authors developed the interactive patient safety reporting curriculum (PSRC), requiring clinical students to engage intellectually and emotionally with personally experienced events in which the safety of one of their patients was compromised. APPROACH: In 2015, the authors incorporated the PSRC into the third-year internal medicine clerkship. Students completed a structured written report, analyzing a patient safety incident they experienced. The report focused on severity of outcome, root cause(s) analysis, system-based prevention, and personal reflection. The report was bookended by 2 interactive, case-based sessions led by faculty with expertise in patient safety, quality improvement, and medical errors. OUTCOMES: Students accurately analyzed the severity of the outcome, and their reports directly led to 2 formal root cause analyses and 4 system-based improvements. NEXT STEPS: The time- and resource-efficient PSRC allows students to apply patient safety knowledge to a medical error they experienced in a way that can directly affect care delivery. This model-interactive learning sessions coupled with engaging in a personally experienced case-can be implemented in various settings. Educators seeking to use student-experienced events for learning should not discount the emotional effects of those events on medical students.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 31335816     DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002872

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


  4 in total

1.  When Bad Things Happen: Training Medical Students to Anticipate the Aftermath of Medical Errors.

Authors:  Swapna Musunur; Eva Waineo; Edward Walton; Kathryn Deeds; Diane Levine
Journal:  Acad Psychiatry       Date:  2020-07-27

2.  Identifying and Analyzing Systems Failures: An Interactive, Experiential Learning Approach to Quality Improvement for Clerkship-Level Medical Students.

Authors:  Galina Gheihman; Brent P Forester; Niraj Sharma; Cynthia So-Armah; Kathleen A Wittels; Tracey A Milligan
Journal:  MedEdPORTAL       Date:  2021-04-30

3.  Evaluating medical students' ability to identify and report errors: finding gaps in patient safety education.

Authors:  Sungjoon Lee; HyeRin Roh; Myounghun Kim; Ji Kyoung Park
Journal:  Med Educ Online       Date:  2022-12

Review 4.  Models of teaching medical errors.

Authors:  Gassem Gohal
Journal:  Pak J Med Sci       Date:  2021 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 1.088

  4 in total

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