Preventing Errors in Clinical Practice: A Call for Self-Awareness
Open Access
- 1 July 2004
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Annals of Family Medicine in Annals of Family Medicine
- Vol. 2 (4) , 310-316
- https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.80
Abstract
While ascribing medical errors primarily to systems factors can free clinicians from individual blame, there are elements of medical errors that can and should be attributed to individual factors. These factors are related less commonly to lack of knowledge and skill than to the inability to apply the clinician’s abilities to situations under certain circumstances. In concert with efforts to improve health care systems, refining physicians’ emotional and cognitive capacities might also prevent many errors. In general, physicians have the sensation of making a mistake because of the interference of emotional elements. We propose a so-called rational-emotive model that emphasizes 2 factors in error causation: (1) difficulty in reframing the first hypothesis that goes to the physician’s mind in an automatic way, and (2) premature closure of the clinical act to avoid confronting inconsistencies, low-level decision rules, and emotions. We propose a teaching strategy based on developing the physician’s insight and self-awareness to detect the inappropriate use of low-level decision rules, as well as detecting the factors that limit a physician’s capacity to tolerate the tension of uncertainty and ambiguity. Emotional self-awareness and self-regulation of attention can be consciously cultivated as habits to help physicians function better in clinical situations.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mindful PracticeJAMA, 1999
- Curiosity.1999
- Promoting Patient Safety by Preventing Medical ErrorJAMA, 1998
- THINKING ABOUT STUDENT THINKINGAcademic Medicine, 1998
- Calibrating the physician. Personal awareness and effective patient care. Working Group on Promoting Physician Personal Awareness, American Academy on Physician and PatientPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1997
- Perceived causes of family physicians' errors.1995
- Elaborated knowledgeAcademic Medicine, 1994
- Relation between Malpractice Claims and Adverse Events Due to NegligenceNew England Journal of Medicine, 1991
- Delays and Sups in Medical DiagnosisPerspectives in Biology and Medicine, 1984
- The structure of medical knowledge in the memories of medical students and general practitioners: categories and prototypesMedical Education, 1984