sábado, 18 de junio de 2016

Increased risk of burnout for physicians and nurses involved in a patient safety incident. | AHRQ Patient Safety Network

Increased risk of burnout for physicians and nurses involved in a patient safety incident. | AHRQ Patient Safety Network



Among Belgian physicians and nurses, those involved in recent error had higher burnout, potentially harmful medication use, plans to leave field.
Med Care. 2016 May 20; [Epub ahead of print].



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  • Study
  •  
  • Published May 2016

Increased risk of burnout for physicians and nurses involved in a patient safety incident.



    Clinicians who are involved in an adverse event often experience significant emotional consequences, leading to the term "second victim." This survey of physicians and nurses in Belgium examined the relationship between involvement in an error in the past 6 months and clinicians' emotional state, risk of engaging in high-risk behaviors, and work–life balance. Involvement in an error was strongly correlated with burnout, potentially harmful medication use, and plans to leave the health care field. The cross-sectional nature of the study makes it difficult to discern causality, and other studies show that burnout increases the risk of committing an error. Nevertheless, this study adds to a growing body of literature demonstrating that errors have long-lasting harmful effects for clinicians. A qualitative studyexplored how clinicians recover from being involved in errors, and a WebM&M commentarydescribes ways that organizations can help clinicians in the recovery process.












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