4.3 Article

Pediatric Trainees' Speaking Up About Unprofessional Behavior and Traditional Patient Safety Threats

期刊

ACADEMIC PEDIATRICS
卷 21, 期 2, 页码 352-357

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.acap.2020.07.014

关键词

professionalism; safety; speaking up; trainee

资金

  1. American Philosophical Society Daland Fellowship in Clinical Investigation
  2. Arnold P. Gold Foundation
  3. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [UL1 TR000445]
  4. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [1K24HD053771]

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The study found that pediatric trainees are more reluctant to speak up about unprofessional behavior compared to traditional safety threats, citing fear of conflict as the main barrier. This highlights the need to improve elements of the clinical learning environment to support trainees in speaking up.
OBJECTIVE: Speaking up is increasingly recognized as essential for patient safety. We aimed to determine pediatric trainees' experiences, attitudes, and anticipated behaviors with speaking up about safety threats including unprofessional behavior. METHODS: Anonymous, cross-sectional survey of 512 pediatric trainees at 2 large US academic children's hospitals that queried experiences, attitudes, barriers and facilitators, and vignette responses for unprofessional behavior and traditional safety threats. RESULTS: Responding trainees (223 of 512, 44%) more commonly observed unprofessional behavior than traditional safety threats (57%, 127 of 223 vs 34%, 75 of 223; P < .001), but reported speaking up about unprofessional behavior less commonly (48%, 27 of 56 vs 79%, 44 of 56; P < .001). Respondents reported feeling less safe speaking up about unprofessional behavior than patient safety concerns (52%, 117 of 223 vs 78%, 173 of 223; P < .001). Respondents were significantly less likely to speaking up to, and use assertive language with, an attending physician in the unprofessional behavior vignette than the traditional safety vignette (10%, 22 of 223 vs 64%, 143 of 223, P < .001 and 12%, 27 of 223 vs 57%, 128 of 223, P < .001, respectively); these differences persisted even among respondents that perceived high potential for patient harm in both vignettes (20%, 16 of 81 vs 69%, 56 of 81, P < .001 and 20%, 16 of 81 vs 69%, 56 of 81, P < .001, respectively). Fear of conflict was the predominant barrier to speaking up about unprofessional behavior and more commonly endorsed for unprofessional behavior than traditional safety threats (67%, 150 of 223 vs 45%, 100 of 223, P < .001). CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest pediatric trainee reluctance to speak up when presented with unprofessional behavior compared to traditional safety threats and highlight a need to improve elements of the clinical learning environment to support speaking up.

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