TY - JOUR
T1 - Speaking up about safety concerns
T2 - Multi-setting qualitative study of patients' views and experiences
AU - Entwistle, Vikki A.
AU - McCaughan, Dorothy
AU - Watt, Ian S.
AU - Birks, Yvonne
AU - Hall, Jill
AU - Peat, Maggie
AU - Williams, Brian
AU - Wright, John
PY - 2010/12
Y1 - 2010/12
N2 - Objectives: To explore patients' and family members' experiences of and views about speaking up about safety concerns at the point of care. Design Qualitative study using 71 individual interviews and 12 focus group discussions. Participants and settings People with recent experience of one of five conditions or interventionsassociated with different safety problems (childhood asthma, diabetes, breast cancer, elective joint replacement and severe and enduring mental health problems) and people who had lodged concerns with healthcare providers were recruited from both NHS services (primary and secondary care) and patient support organisations. Findings Participants had identified various safety concerns in the course of their healthcare and had sometimes spoken up about these as they occurred. Their inclination and ability to speak up were apparently variously shaped by their assessments of the gravity of the threat of harm, the relative importance of their concern given other patients' needs and staff workloads and priorities, their confidence about their grounds for concern, roles and responsibilities and the likely consequences of speaking up. These assessments were pervasively influenced by the way healthcare staff behaved and related to them. People who had spoken up about concerns reported diverse responses from health professionals. Some responses averted harm or provided welcome reassurance, but others exacerbated anxieties and possibly contributed to patient harm. Conclusion: The potential for patients to contribute to their safety by speaking up about their concerns depends heavily on the quality of patienteprofessional interactions and relationships.
AB - Objectives: To explore patients' and family members' experiences of and views about speaking up about safety concerns at the point of care. Design Qualitative study using 71 individual interviews and 12 focus group discussions. Participants and settings People with recent experience of one of five conditions or interventionsassociated with different safety problems (childhood asthma, diabetes, breast cancer, elective joint replacement and severe and enduring mental health problems) and people who had lodged concerns with healthcare providers were recruited from both NHS services (primary and secondary care) and patient support organisations. Findings Participants had identified various safety concerns in the course of their healthcare and had sometimes spoken up about these as they occurred. Their inclination and ability to speak up were apparently variously shaped by their assessments of the gravity of the threat of harm, the relative importance of their concern given other patients' needs and staff workloads and priorities, their confidence about their grounds for concern, roles and responsibilities and the likely consequences of speaking up. These assessments were pervasively influenced by the way healthcare staff behaved and related to them. People who had spoken up about concerns reported diverse responses from health professionals. Some responses averted harm or provided welcome reassurance, but others exacerbated anxieties and possibly contributed to patient harm. Conclusion: The potential for patients to contribute to their safety by speaking up about their concerns depends heavily on the quality of patienteprofessional interactions and relationships.
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U2 - 10.1136/qshc.2009.039743
DO - 10.1136/qshc.2009.039743
M3 - Article
C2 - 21127092
AN - SCOPUS:78650341326
SN - 1475-3898
VL - 19
SP - e33
JO - Quality and Safety in Health Care
JF - Quality and Safety in Health Care
IS - 6
ER -