| Title: |
Responding to adverse patient safety events in Viet Nam |
| Authors: |
Harrison, R; Sharma, A; Walton, M; Esguerra, E; Onobrakpor, S; Nghia, BT; Chinh, ND |
| Source: |
urn:ISSN:1472-6963 ; BMC Health Services Research, 19, 1, 677 |
| Publisher Information: |
Springer Nature |
| Publication Year: |
2019 |
| Collection: |
UNSW Sydney (The University of New South Wales): UNSWorks |
| Subject Terms: |
4203 Health Services and Systems; 4205 Nursing; 42 Health Sciences; Patient Safety; Generic health relevance; 3 Good Health and Well Being; Adaptation; Psychological; Adolescent; Adult; Child; Preschool; Counseling; Cross-Sectional Studies; Emotions; Female; Health Personnel; Hospitals; Humans; Infant; Newborn; Learning; Male; Medical Errors; Middle Aged; Physicians; Risk Management; Safety Management; Surveys and Questionnaires; Vietnam |
| Description: |
Background: The psychological and professional impact of adverse events on doctors and nurses is well-established, but limited data has emerged from low-and middle-income. This article reports the experiences of being involved in a patient safety event, incident reporting and organisational support available to assist health professionals in Viet Nam to learn and recover. Method: Doctors and nurses (1000) from all departments of a 1500-bed surgical and trauma hospital in Viet Nam were invited to take part in a cross-sectional survey. The survey explored respondents' involvement in adverse events and/or near miss, their emotional, behavioural and coping responses, experiences of organisational incident reporting, and the learning and/or other consequences of the event. Survey items also assessed the availability of organisational support including peer support and mentorship. Results: Of the 497 respondents, 295 (59%) experienced an adverse event in which a patient was harmed, of which 86 (17%) resulted in serious patient harm. 397 (80%) of respondents experienced a near miss, with 140 of these (28%) having potential for serious harm. 386 (77%) reporting they had been affected professionally or personally in some way, with impacts to psychological health (416; 84%), physical health (388; 78%), job satisfaction (378; 76%) and confidence in their ability (276; 56%) commonly reported. Many respondents were unable to identify local improvements (373; 75%) or organisation-wide improvements following safety events (359; 72%) and 171 (34%) admitted that they had not reported an event to their organisation or manager that they should have. Conclusions: Health professionals in Viet Nam report impacts to psychological and physical health as a result of involvement in safety events that reflect those of health professionals internationally. Reports of limited organisational learning and improvement following safety events suggest that patient safety culture is underdeveloped in Viet Nam currently. In order to progress work ... |
| Document Type: |
article in journal/newspaper |
| File Description: |
application/pdf |
| Language: |
unknown |
| Relation: |
https://hdl.handle.net/1959.4/unsworks_63962 |
| DOI: |
10.1186/s12913-019-4518-y |
| Availability: |
https://hdl.handle.net/1959.4/unsworks_63962; https://unsworks.unsw.edu.au/bitstreams/c08c72e5-c713-47ba-bf71-86da7cf995e7/download; https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-019-4518-y |
| Rights: |
open access ; https://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2 ; CC BY ; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ; free_to_read |
| Accession Number: |
edsbas.ECF8C877 |
| Database: |
BASE |