학술논문

“Good Catch, Kiddo”—Enhancing Patient Safety in the Pediatric Emergency Department Through Simulation
Document Type
article
Source
Pediatric Emergency Care. 38(1)
Subject
Paediatrics
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Research
Patient Safety
Prevention
Pediatric
Child
Emergency Service
Hospital
Humans
Patient Simulation
Risk Management
Simulation Training
Students
Medical
patient safety
simulation training
education
Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine
Emergency & Critical Care Medicine
Language
Abstract
ObjectivesAdverse events that affect patient safety are a significant concern in pediatrics. Increasing situational awareness, identifying errors and near misses, and reporting them using organizational incident reporting systems enables mitigation of harm.MethodsWe designed and tested a brief, interactive, and easily replicable simulation activity for medical students, and emergency medicine interns and pediatric interns to strengthen their skills and enhance their self-efficacy in identifying and reporting patient safety hazards. Hazards fell into the categories of situational safety, patient identification and privacy, infection prevention, treatment errors, and issues with electronic health records (EHRs).ResultsThe simulation training significantly increased the self-efficacy of medical students and interns in identifying and reporting patient safety hazards. Learners were very satisfied with the simulation training, successfully recognized key patient safety hazards, provided feedback to improve the training, and improved their ability to report hazards through organizational incident reporting systems. Patient safety hazards associated with patient misidentification were recognized most frequently, whereas safety hazards associated with EHRs were missed with the greatest frequency.ConclusionsThe simulation training enabled learners to identify hazards and near misses and enhanced their ability to report hazards through organizational incident reporting systems. Learners at all levels of training identified safety hazards at comparable rates, which demonstrates the role that trainees play in critically observing clinical settings with fresh eyes and identifying and reporting patient safety hazards. Interventions to promote patient safety need to prioritize building situational awareness of potential hazards associated with EHR use.