开放获取的医疗简报视频需要纳入更多的Safety-II学习内容。

IF 4.7 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Suzanne Bentley, Alexander Meshel, Komal Bajaj
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:患者安全科学和汇报方法历来倾向于将重点放在safety - i或“为什么事情会出错”上,并从不利的表现中学习,不良结果的根本原因,以及从失败中吸取的改进机会。因此,从“为什么事情会顺利进行”、成功的性能以及探索系统如何成功、适应和有效地执行而不管结果(安全性ii)中进行分析和学习的丰富机会往往没有得到充分的体现。方法:通过谷歌和YouTube搜索关键词“医疗简报”、“医疗简报”、“医疗简报视频”、“医疗简报视频”、“医疗简报示例”、“医疗简报示例”、“模拟简报”和“模拟简报”,获取开放式医疗简报视频。此外,还利用了主要专业组织网站的搜索。对所包括的视频进行审查,对所有话语进行评分:(1)汇报阶段;(二)疑问或者陈述;(三)由调解人或者参与者;(4)如果话语是中性的,则与积极表现/“进展顺利”或消极表现/“可以改进的地方”有关;(5)如果引导者的话语是一般性的,或者是建立在先前讨论基础上的后续反思性话语;(6)如果参与者的话语是一般性的或具体的反思性、洞察力的评论;(7)对所有引导者后续/特定反思型话语进行进一步分析和编码,以探索安全i(例如,探索错误发生的原因)或安全ii(例如,适应性,变异,再生产成功)概念。结果:对开放获取的医疗报告视频示例的回顾显示了对安全性- i的过分强调,并强调了开放获取的医疗报告示例包含其他语言和技术的机会,以促进和示范纳入安全性- ii讨论。结论:虽然总有改进的空间,我们都必须努力做到最好,但我们正在失去一个通过安全ii探索分析事情积极发展的原因来建立弹性的重要机会。那些设计这样的教学视频的人应该有意识地包括集中在安全i和安全ii方面的任务汇报,而不管结果如何,因为它们都是重要的,互补的,并导致对改进机会和成功的更全面的理解。未来对safety - ii汇报影响的研究应侧重于具体情况下对质量和患者安全的促进,以及对参与者福祉和整体安全文化的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Open-access healthcare debriefing videos need to incorporate more Safety-II learnings.

Open-access healthcare debriefing videos need to incorporate more Safety-II learnings.

Open-access healthcare debriefing videos need to incorporate more Safety-II learnings.

Open-access healthcare debriefing videos need to incorporate more Safety-II learnings.

Background: Patient safety science and debriefing approaches have historically tended to focus most heavily on Safety-I or "why things go wrong" and learning from unfavorable performance, root cause of adverse outcomes, and improvement opportunities learned from failures. Consequently, rich opportunities for analysis and learning from "why things go right," successful performance, and exploration of how systems succeed, adapt, and perform effectively regardless of outcome-Safety-II-are often underrepresented.

Methods: Open-access videos of healthcare debriefing were sought by searching Google and YouTube via search terms "healthcare debriefing," "healthcare debrief," "healthcare debriefing video," "healthcare debrief video," "healthcare debriefing example," "healthcare debrief example," "simulation debriefing," and "simulation debrief." Additionally, a search of major professional organization websites was utilized. Included videos were reviewed to score all utterances on the following: (1) phase of debriefing; (2) question or statement; (3) by facilitator or participant; (4) if utterance was neutral, related to positive performance/ "what went well" or negative performance/"what could be improved"; (5) if facilitator utterance was general or a follow-up, reflective utterance building upon previous discussion; (6) if participant utterances were general or specific reflective, insight offering comments; (7) all facilitator follow-up/ specific reflective type utterances were further analyzed and coded as exploration into Safety-I (e.g., exploration of why error occurred) or Safety-II (e.g., adaptability, variation, reproducing success) concepts.

Results: A review of open-access video examples of healthcare debriefing demonstrates disproportionate emphasis on Safety-I and highlights the opportunity for open-access examples of healthcare debriefing to include additional language and techniques that promote and role model inclusion of Safety-II discussion.

Conclusions: While there is always room for improvement and we must all strive to do the best we can, we are missing a major opportunity to build resilience by Safety-II exploration into analyzing why things go positively. Those designing such instructional videos should intentionally include debriefing focused on both Safety-I and Safety-II aspects of performance, regardless of outcome, as they are both important, complimentary, and result in a more holistic understanding of improvement opportunities and success. Future study on the impact of Safety-II debriefing should focus on context-specific promotion of quality and patient safety, as well as impact on participant wellbeing and overall safety culture.

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