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Patient safety in the undergraduate curriculum:
medical students' perception
Gilberto KK Leung,
Nivritti G Patil
Centre of Education and Training,
Department of Surgery, The University
of Hong Kong, Queen Mary Hospital,
Pokfulam, Hong Kong
OBJECTIVE. Patient safety has emerged as a distinct health care discipline
and an undergraduate programme on patient safety is being
introduced at the authors' institution. The present study aimed
to assess medical students' perceptions and knowledge on
patient safety issues.
DESIGN. A self-administered voluntary questionnaire survey.
SETTING. Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong,
Hong Kong.
PARTICIPANTS. A total of 130 fourth-year medical students.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES. Students' baseline perceptions and knowledge on patient safety
issues.
RESULTS. The majority of students agreed that medical errors were
inevitable but over 25% opined that "competent physicians do
not make errors". The majority disapproved the practice of nondisclosure
of error; whilst 6% would not address 'near-miss'
events, and almost 10% did not support an active reporting
system. Nearly half of the students were neutral on the notion
that uncertainty should not be tolerated in patient care, and
over 80% agreed that the most effective strategy to prevent error
was "to work harder and be more careful". A knowledge gap in
patient safety issues existed. Over 80% of students supported
the introduction of our new undergraduate programme.
CONCLUSION. Medical students were aware of medial errors being an inevitable
barrier between intended 'best care' and what was actually
provided to patients. Students appeared to lack the appreciation
of non-physician–based causes of errors, and the importance of
a multidisciplinary approach to the management of incidents.
A formal curriculum on patient safety is urgently needed in this
locality, and such an initiative was supported by the medical
students who were surveyed.
Hong Kong Med J 2009;16:Epub 2010 Feb 3
Key words: Curriculum; Education, medical,
undergraduate; Medical errors; Safety
management; Students, medical
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