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Junior doctors’ views on reporting concerns about patient safety: a qualitative study

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posted on 2015-04-27, 09:18 authored by Patricia Hooper, David Kocman, Sue Carr, Carolyn Tarrant
Background Enabling healthcare staff to report concerns is critical for improving patient safety. Junior doctors are one of the groups least likely to engage in incident reporting. This matters both for the present and for the future, as many will eventually be in leadership positions. Little is known about junior doctors’ attitudes towards formally reporting concerns. Aims To explore the attitudes and barriers to junior doctors formally reporting concerns about patient safety to the organisations in which they are training Methods A qualitative study comprising three focus groups with ten junior doctors at an Acute Teaching Hospital Trust in the Midlands, UK, conducted in 2013. Focus group discussions were transcribed verbatim and analysed using a thematic approach, facilitated by NVivo 10. Results Participants were supportive of the idea of playing a role in helping healthcare organisations become more aware of risks to patient safety, but identified that existing incident reporting systems could frustrate efforts to report concerns. They described barriers to reporting including a lack of rolemodelling and senior leadership, a culture within medicine that was not conducive to reporting concerns, and a lack of feedback providing evidence that formal reporting was worthwhile. They reported a tendency to rely on informal ways of dealing with concerns as an alternative to engaging with formal reporting systems. Conclusions If healthcare organisations are to be able to gather and learn from intelligence about risks to patient safety from junior doctors, this will require attention to the features of reporting systems, as well as the implications of hierarchies and the wider cultural context in which junior doctors work.

Funding

PH’s post was supported by Health Education East Midlands

History

Citation

Postgraduate Medical Journal 2015;0:1–6

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Postgraduate Medical Journal 2015;0:1–6

Publisher

BMJ Publishing Group for Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine(FPM)

issn

0032-5473

eissn

1469-0756

Available date

2015-10-21

Publisher version

http://pmj.bmj.com/content/early/2015/04/21/postgradmedj-2014-133045

Language

en

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