Original Research

An Analysis of the Involvement and Attitudes of Resident Physicians in Reporting Errors in Patient Care


 

References

From Adelante Healthcare, Mesa, AZ (Dr. Chin), University Hospitals of Cleveland, Cleveland, OH (Drs. Delozier, Bascug, Levine, Bejanishvili, and Wynbrandt and Janet C. Peachey, Rachel M. Cerminara, and Sharon M. Darkovich), and Houston Methodist Hospitals, Houston, TX (Dr. Bhakta).

Abstract

Background: Resident physicians play an active role in the reporting of errors that occur in patient care. Previous studies indicate that residents significantly underreport errors in patient care.

Methods: Fifty-four of 80 eligible residents enrolled at University Hospitals–Regional Hospitals (UH-RH) during the 2018-2019 academic year completed a survey assessing their knowledge and experience in completing Patient Advocacy and Shared Stories (PASS) reports, which serve as incident reports in the UH health system in reporting errors in patient care. A series of interventions aimed at educating residents about the PASS report system were then conducted. The 54 residents who completed the first survey received it again 4 months later.

Results: Residents demonstrated greater understanding of when filing PASS reports was appropriate after the intervention, as significantly more residents reported having been involved in a situation where they should have filed a PASS report but did not (P = 0.036).

Conclusion: In this study, residents often did not report errors in patient care because they simply did not know the process for doing so. In addition, many residents often felt that the reporting of patient errors could be used as a form of retaliation.

Keywords: resident physicians; quality improvement; high-value care; medical errors; patient safety.

Resident physicians play a critical role in patient care. Residents undergo extensive supervised training in order to one day be able to practice medicine in an unsupervised setting, with the goal of providing the highest quality of care possible. One study reported that primary care provided by residents in a training program is of similar or higher quality than that provided by attending physicians.1

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