Speaking up behavior and cognitive bias in hand hygiene: Competences of German-speaking medical students

被引:11
作者
Bushuven, Stefan [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Dettenkofer, Markus [2 ]
Sippel, Sonia [4 ]
Koenig, Sarah [4 ]
Bushuven, Stefanie [5 ]
Schneider-Brachert, Wulf [6 ]
机构
[1] Healthcare Assoc Constance GLKN, Inst Anesthesiol Intens Care Emergency Med & Pain, Hegau Bodensee Hosp Singen & Hegau Jugendwerk Gai, Radolfzell am Bodensee, Germany
[2] Healthcare Assoc Constance GLKN, Inst Hosp Hyg & Infect Prevent, Radolfzell am Bodensee, Germany
[3] Ludwig Maximilians Univ Munchen, Inst Didact & Educ Res Med, Clin Univ Munich, Munich, Germany
[4] Univ Hosp Wuerzburg, Inst Med Teaching & Med Educ Res, Wurzburg, Germany
[5] Healthcare Assoc Constance GLKN, Clin Orthoped Hand & Trauma Surg, Hegau Bodensee Hosp Singen, Radolfzell am Bodensee, Germany
[6] Univ Hosp Regensburg, Dept Infect Control & Infect Dis, Regensburg, Germany
关键词
PATIENT SAFETY; HEALTH-CARE; FEEDBACK; OVERCONFIDENCE; DOCTORS; ERRORS;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0239444
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Introduction Infection prevention and speaking up on errors are core qualities of health care providers. Heuristic effects (e.g. overconfidence) may impair behavior in daily routine, while speaking up can be inhibited by hierarchical barriers and medical team factors. Aim of this investigation was to determine, how medical students experience these difficulties for hand hygiene in daily routine. Methods On the base of prior investigations we developed a questionnaire with 5-point Likert ordinal scaled items and free text entries. This was tested for validity and reliability (Cronbach's Alpha 0.89). Accredited German, Swiss and Austrian universities were contacted and medical students asked to participated in the anonymous online survey. Quantitative statistics used parametric and non-parametric tests and effect size calculations according to Lakens. Qualitative data was coded according to Janesick. Results 1042 undergraduates of 12 universities participated. All rated their capabilities in hand hygiene and feedback reception higher than those of fellow students, nurses and physicians (p<0.001). Half of the participants rating themselves to be best educated, realized that faulty hand hygiene can be of lethal effect. Findings were independent from age, sex, academic course and university. Speaking-up in case of omitted hand hygiene was rated to be done seldomly and most rare on persons of higher hierarchic levels. Qualitative results of 164 entries showed four main themes: 1) Education methods in hand hygiene are insufficient, 2) Hierarchy barriers impair constructive work place culture 3) Hygiene and feedback are linked to medical ethics and 4) There is no consequence for breaking hygiene rules. Discussion Although partially limited by the selection bias, this study confirms the overconfidence-effects demonstrated in post-graduates in other settings and different professions. The independence from study progress suggests, that the effect occurs before start of the academic course with need for educational intervention at the very beginning. Qualitative data showed that used methods are insufficient and contradictory work place behavior in hospitals are frustrating. Even 20 years after "To err is human", work place culture still is far away from the desirable.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 51 条
[1]   Operation Debrief A SHARP Improvement in Performance Feedback in the Operating Room [J].
Ahmed, Maria ;
Arora, Sonal ;
Russ, Stephanie ;
Darzi, Ara ;
Vincent, Charles ;
Sevdalis, Nick .
ANNALS OF SURGERY, 2013, 258 (06) :958-963
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2004, LANGUES ET LITTERATU, V5, P69
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2019, STAT ANZAHL STUDENTE
[4]   Qualitative data analysis for health services research: Developing taxonomy, themes, and theory [J].
Bradley, Elizabeth H. ;
Curry, Leslie A. ;
Devers, Kelly J. .
HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, 2007, 42 (04) :1758-1772
[5]   The basis of clinical tribalism, hierarchy and stereotyping: a laboratory-controlled teamwork experiment [J].
Braithwaite, Jeffrey ;
Clay-Williams, Robyn ;
Vecellio, Elia ;
Marks, Danielle ;
Hooper, Tamara ;
Westbrook, Mary ;
Westbrook, Johanna ;
Blakely, Brette ;
Ludlow, Kristiana .
BMJ OPEN, 2016, 6 (07)
[6]   Improving patient safety: we need to reduce hierarchy and empower junior doctors to speak up [J].
Brennan, Peter A. ;
Davidson, Mike .
BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2019, 366
[7]   COMING TO TERMS WITH FAILURE - PRIVATE SELF-ENHANCEMENT AND PUBLIC SELF-EFFACEMENT [J].
BROWN, JD ;
GALLAGHER, FM .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1992, 28 (01) :3-22
[8]  
Bushuven S., 2018, Am J Infect Control
[9]   Cognitive bias in professional hand hygiene and feedback: A national online-survey on overconfidence in Germany [J].
Bushuven, Stefan ;
Weidenbusch, Marc ;
Mohr, Stefan ;
Delis, Achilles ;
Fischer, Martin R. ;
Juenger, Jana ;
Dettenkofer, Markus .
INFECTION CONTROL AND HOSPITAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2019, 40 (08) :943-946
[10]   Escape from the diffusion of responsibility: A review and guide for nurses [J].
Christensen, Scott S. .
JOURNAL OF NURSING MANAGEMENT, 2019, 27 (02) :264-270