@article{2143, author = {Brian M. Wong and Maitreya Coffey and Markku T. Nousiainen and Ryan Brydges and Heather McDonald-Blumer and Adelle Atkinson and Wendy Levinson and Lynfa Stroud}, title = {Learning through experience: influence of formal and informal training on medical error disclosure skills in residents}, abstract = {

BACKGROUND : Residents' attitudes toward error disclosure have improved over time. It is unclear whether this has been accompanied by improvements in disclosure skills.

OBJECTIVE : To measure the disclosure skills of internal medicine (IM), paediatrics, and orthopaedic surgery residents, and to explore resident perceptions of formal versus informal training in preparing them for disclosure in real-world practice.

METHODS : We assessed residents' error disclosure skills using a structured role play with a standardized patient in 2012-2013. We compared disclosure skills across programs using analysis of variance. We conducted a multiple linear regression, including data from a historical cohort of IM residents from 2005, to investigate the influence of predictor variables on performance: training program, cohort year, and prior disclosure training and experience. We conducted a qualitative descriptive analysis of data from semistructured interviews with residents to explore resident perceptions of formal versus informal disclosure training.

RESULTS : In a comparison of disclosure skills for 49 residents, there was no difference in overall performance across specialties (4.1 to 4.4 of 5,  = .19). In regression analysis, only the current cohort was significantly associated with skill: current residents performed better than a historical cohort of 42 IM residents ( < .001). Qualitative analysis identified the importance of both formal (workshops, morbidity and mortality rounds) and informal (role modeling, debriefing) activities in preparation for disclosure in real-world practice.

CONCLUSIONS : Residents across specialties have similar skills in disclosure of errors. Residents identified role modeling and a strong local patient safety culture as key facilitators for disclosure.

}, year = {2017}, journal = {J Grad Med Educ}, volume = {9}, pages = {66-72}, month = {02/2017}, issn = {1949-8357}, doi = {10.4300/JGME-D-16-00263.1}, language = {eng}, }