مواقف طلاب كليات الطب تجاه الأخطاء الطبية وسلامة المريض: دراسة مقطعية في قطاع غزة، فلسطين pdf

تفاصيل الدراسة

مواقف طلاب كليات الطب تجاه الأخطاء الطبية وسلامة المريض: دراسة مقطعية في قطاع غزة، فلسطين pdf
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مواقف طلاب كليات الطب تجاه الأخطاء الطبية وسلامة المريض: دراسة مقطعية في قطاع غزة، فلسطين pdf

ملخص الدراسة:

Background: In undergraduate medical education, patient safety concepts and understanding of medical errors are under-represented. This problem is more evident in low-income settings. The aim of this study was to explore undergraduate medical students’ attitudes towards patient safety in the low-income setting of the Gaza Strip._x000D__x000D_
Methods: A cross-sectional, descriptive study included medical students of the two medical schools in the Gaza Strip with 338 medical students completing the Attitudes to Patient Safety Questionnaire-IV (APSQ-IV), which examines patient attitudes in 29 items over 10 domains. Results are represented as means ± standard deviations for each item and domain as well as percentage of positive responses to specific items._x000D__x000D_
Results: Medical students reported slightly positive patient safety attitudes (4.7 ± 0.5 of 7) with the most positive attitudes in the domains of situational awareness, importance of patient safety in the curriculum, error inevitability and team functioning. While no negative attitudes were reported, neutral attitudes were found in the domains of professional incompetence as a cause of error and error reporting confidence. Study year and gender had no significant association with patient safety attitudes, except for disclosure responsibility, where male students displayed significantly more positive attitudes. The study university was significantly associated with three of the 10 examined domains, all of which involved understanding of medical errors, for which students of University 2 (who had undergone limited patient safety training) held significantly more positive attitudes, compared with students of University 1 (who did not have structured patient safety training)._x000D__x000D_
Conclusion: Medical students’ patient safety attitudes were very similar among students from both universities, except for understanding of medical error, for which students, who had received structured training in this topic, displayed significantly more positive attitudes. This underlines the power of the ‘hidden curriculum’, where students adjust to prevalent cultures in local hospitals, while they do their clinical training. Furthermore, it highlights the need for a systematic inclusion of patient safety content in local undergraduate curricula.

توثيق المرجعي (APA)

خصائص الدراسة

  • المؤلف

    Alser, Mohammed

    Böttcher, Bettina

    Alfaqawi, Maha

    Jlambo, Abdallah

    Abuzubaida , Walaa

    Abu-El-noor, Nasser

  • الناشر:

    BMC Medical Education

  • المصدر:

    المستودع الرقمي للجامعة الإسلامية بغزة

  • نوع المحتوى:

    Journal Article

  • اللغة:

    English

  • محكمة:

    نعم

  • الدولة:

    فلسطين

  • النص:

    دراسة كاملة

  • نوع الملف:

    pdf

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