Medical errors: Disclosure styles, interpersonal forgiveness, and outcomes

被引:25
作者
Hannawa, Annegret F. [1 ]
Shigemoto, Yuki [2 ]
Little, Todd D. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Svizzera Italiana USI Lugano, Fac Commun Sci, Ctr Adv Healthcare Qual & Patient Safety, Via G Buffi 13, CH-6900 Lugano, Switzerland
[2] Texas Tech Univ, Dept Psychol, Lubbock, TX 79409 USA
[3] Texas Tech Univ, IMMAP, Lubbock, TX 79409 USA
关键词
Forgiveness; Medical error; Disclosure; Malpractice; Provider-patient communication; Empathy; Patient safety; Quality of care; PHYSICIANS;
D O I
10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.03.026
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Rationale: This study investigates the intrapersonal and interpersonal factors and processes that are associated with patient forgiveness of a provider in the aftermath of a harmful medical error. Objective: This study aims to examine what antecedents are most predictive of patient forgiveness and non-forgiveness, and the extent to which social-cognitive factors (i.e., fault attributions, empathy, rumination) influence the forgiveness process. Furthermore, the study evaluates the role of different disclosure styles in two different forgiveness models, and measures their respective causal outcomes. Methods: In January 2011, 318 outpatients at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in the United States were randomly assigned to three hypothetical error disclosure vignettes that operationalized verbally effective disclosures with different nonverbal disclosure styles (i.e., high nonverbal involvement, low nonverbal involvement, written disclosure vignette without nonverbal information). All patients responded to the same forgiveness-related self-report measures after having been exposed to one of the vignettes. Results: The results favored the proximity model of interpersonal forgiveness, which implies that factors more proximal in time to the act of forgiving (i.e., patient rumination and empathy for the offender) are more predictive of forgiveness and non-forgiveness than less proximal factors (e.g., relationship variables and offense-related factors such as the presence or absence of an apology). Patients' fault attributions had no effect on their forgiveness across conditions. The results evidenced sizeable effects of physician nonverbal involvement-patients in the low nonverbal involvement condition perceived the error as more severe, experienced the physician's apology as less sincere, were more likely to blame the physician, felt less empathy, ruminated more about the error, were less likely to forgive and more likely to avoid the physician, reported less closeness, trust, and satisfaction but higher distress, were more likely to change doctors, less compliant, and more likely to seek legal advice. Conclusion: The findings of this study imply that physician nonverbal involvement during error disclosures stimulates a healing mechanism for patients and the physician-patient relationship. Physicians who disclose a medical error in a nonverbally uninvolved way, on the other hand, carry a higher malpractice risk and are less likely to promote healthy, reconciliatory outcomes. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:29 / 38
页数:10
相关论文
共 30 条
  • [1] [Anonymous], THESIS U NEBRASKA LI
  • [2] [Anonymous], 2000, HELPING CLIENTS FORG, DOI DOI 10.1037/10381-000
  • [3] Patient safety: Views of practicing physicians and the public on medical errors
    Blendon, RJ
    DesRoches, CM
    Brodie, M
    Benson, JM
    Rosen, AB
    Schneider, E
    Altman, DE
    Zapert, K
    Herrmann, MJ
    Steffenson, AE
    [J]. NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2002, 347 (24) : 1933 - 1940
  • [4] ALTERNATIVE WAYS OF ASSESSING MODEL FIT
    BROWNE, MW
    CUDECK, R
    [J]. SOCIOLOGICAL METHODS & RESEARCH, 1992, 21 (02) : 230 - 258
  • [5] Evaluating goodness-of-fit indexes for testing measurement invariance
    Cheung, GW
    Rensvold, RB
    [J]. STRUCTURAL EQUATION MODELING-A MULTIDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL, 2002, 9 (02) : 233 - 255
  • [6] Efron B., 1993, INTRO BOOTSTRAP
  • [7] Choosing your words carefully - How physicians would disclose harmful medical errors to patients
    Gallagher, Thomas H.
    Garbutt, Jane M.
    Waterman, Amy D.
    Flum, David R.
    Larson, Eric B.
    Waterman, Brian M.
    Dunagan, W. Claiborne
    Fraser, Victoria J.
    Levinson, Wendy
    [J]. ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2006, 166 (15) : 1585 - 1593
  • [8] Lost opportunities: How physicians communicate about medical errors
    Garbutt, Jane
    Waterman, Amy D.
    Kapp, Julie M.
    Dunagan, William Claiborne
    Levinson, Wendy
    Fraser, Victoria
    Gallagher, Thomas H.
    [J]. HEALTH AFFAIRS, 2008, 27 (01) : 246 - 255
  • [9] House staff nonverbal communication skills and standardized patient satisfaction
    Griffith, CH
    Wilson, JF
    Langer, S
    Haist, SA
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2003, 18 (03) : 170 - 174
  • [10] Guerrero LK, 2005, SOURCEBOOK OF NONVERBAL MEASURES: GOING BEYOND WORDS, P221