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Clinicians’ Perspectives on Proactive Patient Safety Behaviors in the Perioperative Environment

IMPORTANCE: The perioperative environment is hazardous, but patients remain safe with a successful outcome during their care due to staff adaptability and resiliency. The behaviors that support this adaptability and resilience have yet to be defined or analyzed. One Safe Act (OSA), a tool and activi...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Duffy, Caoimhe, Menon, Neil, Horak, David, Bass, Geoffrey D., Talwar, Ruchika, Lorenzi, Cara, Taing Vo, Christina, Chiang, Chienhui, Ziemba, Justin B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Medical Association 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10091176/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37040109
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.7621
Descripción
Sumario:IMPORTANCE: The perioperative environment is hazardous, but patients remain safe with a successful outcome during their care due to staff adaptability and resiliency. The behaviors that support this adaptability and resilience have yet to be defined or analyzed. One Safe Act (OSA), a tool and activity developed to capture self-reported proactive safety behaviors that staff use in their daily practice to promote individual and team-based safe patient care, may allow for improved definition and analysis of these behaviors. OBJECTIVE: To thematically analyze staff behaviors using OSA to understand what may serve as the basis for proactive safety in the perioperative environment. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This qualitative thematic analysis included a convenience sample of perioperative staff at a single-center, tertiary care academic medical center who participated in an OSA activity during a 6-month period in 2021. All perioperative staff were eligible for inclusion. A combined deductive approach, based on a human factor analysis and classification framework, as well as an inductive approach was used to develop themes and analyze the self-reported staff safety behaviors. EXPOSURES: Those selected to participate were asked to join an OSA activity, which was conducted in-person by a facilitator. Participants were to self-reflect about their OSA (proactive safety behavior) and record their experience as free text in an online survey tool. MAIN OUTCOME AND MEASURES: The primary outcome was the development and application of a set of themes to describe proactive safety behaviors in the perioperative environment. RESULTS: A total of 140 participants (33 nurses [23.6%] and 18 trainee physicians [12.9%]), which represented 21.3% of the 657 total perioperative department full-time staff, described 147 behaviors. A total of 8 non–mutually exclusive themes emerged with the following categories and frequency of behaviors: (1) routine-based adaptations (46 responses [31%]); (2) resource availability and assessment adaptations (31 responses [21%]); (3) communication and coordination adaptation (23 responses [16%]); (4) environmental ergonomics adaptation (17 responses [12%]); (5) situational awareness adaptation (12 responses [8%]); (6) personal or team readiness adaptation (8 responses [5%]); (7) education adaptation (5 responses [3%]); and (8) social awareness adaptation (5 responses [3%]). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The OSA activity elicited and captured proactive safety behaviors performed by staff. A set of behavioral themes were identified that may serve as the basis for individual practices of resilience and adaptability that promote patient safety.