Patient safety education for undergraduate medical students: a systematic review

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>To reduce harm caused by health care is a global priority. Medical students should be able to recognize unsafe conditions, systematically report errors and near misses, investigate and improve such systems with a thorough understandi...

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Main Authors: Zhang Mingming, Barraclough Bruce H, Chen Peixian, Duan Yurong, Li Lin, Nie Yanli, Li Jing
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2011-06-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6920/11/33
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spelling doaj-4dedbcbfea344129bab7ca4e4e3691342020-11-25T03:37:16ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202011-06-011113310.1186/1472-6920-11-33Patient safety education for undergraduate medical students: a systematic reviewZhang MingmingBarraclough Bruce HChen PeixianDuan YurongLi LinNie YanliLi Jing<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>To reduce harm caused by health care is a global priority. Medical students should be able to recognize unsafe conditions, systematically report errors and near misses, investigate and improve such systems with a thorough understanding of human fallibility, and disclose errors to patients. Incorporating the knowledge of how to do this into the medical student curriculum is an urgent necessity. This paper aims to systematically review the literature about patient safety education for undergraduate medical students in terms of its content, teaching strategies, faculty availability and resources provided so as to identify evidence on how to promote patient safety in the curriculum for medical schools. This paper includes a perspective from the faculty of a medical school, a major hospital and an Evidence Based Medicine Centre in Sichuan Province, China.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We searched MEDLINE, ERIC, Academic Source Premier(ASP), EMBASE and three Chinese Databases (Chinese Biomedical Literature Database, CBM; China National Knowledge Infrastructure, CNKI; Wangfang Data) from 1980 to Dec. 2009. The pre-specified form of inclusion and exclusion criteria were developed for literature screening. The quality of included studies was assessed using Darcy Reed and Gemma Flores-Mateo criteria. Two reviewers selected the studies, undertook quality assessment, and data extraction independently. Differing opinions were resolved by consensus or with help from the third person.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>This was a descriptive study of a total of seven studies that met the selection criteria. There were no relevant Chinese studies to be included. Only one study included patient safety education in the medical curriculum and the remaining studies integrated patient safety into clinical rotations or medical clerkships. Seven studies were of a pre and post study design, of which there was only one controlled study. There was considerable variation in relation to contents, teaching strategies, faculty knowledge and background in patient safety, other resources and outcome evaluation in these reports. The outcomes from including patient safety in the curriculum as measured by medical students' knowledge, skills, and attitudes varied between the studies.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>There are only a few relevant published studies on the inclusion of patient safety education into the undergraduate curriculum in medical schools either as a selective course, a lecture program, or by being integrated into the existing curriculum even in developed countries with advanced health and education systems. The integration of patient safety education into the existing curriculum in medical schools internationally, provides significant challenges.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6920/11/33
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhang Mingming
Barraclough Bruce H
Chen Peixian
Duan Yurong
Li Lin
Nie Yanli
Li Jing
spellingShingle Zhang Mingming
Barraclough Bruce H
Chen Peixian
Duan Yurong
Li Lin
Nie Yanli
Li Jing
Patient safety education for undergraduate medical students: a systematic review
BMC Medical Education
author_facet Zhang Mingming
Barraclough Bruce H
Chen Peixian
Duan Yurong
Li Lin
Nie Yanli
Li Jing
author_sort Zhang Mingming
title Patient safety education for undergraduate medical students: a systematic review
title_short Patient safety education for undergraduate medical students: a systematic review
title_full Patient safety education for undergraduate medical students: a systematic review
title_fullStr Patient safety education for undergraduate medical students: a systematic review
title_full_unstemmed Patient safety education for undergraduate medical students: a systematic review
title_sort patient safety education for undergraduate medical students: a systematic review
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2011-06-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>To reduce harm caused by health care is a global priority. Medical students should be able to recognize unsafe conditions, systematically report errors and near misses, investigate and improve such systems with a thorough understanding of human fallibility, and disclose errors to patients. Incorporating the knowledge of how to do this into the medical student curriculum is an urgent necessity. This paper aims to systematically review the literature about patient safety education for undergraduate medical students in terms of its content, teaching strategies, faculty availability and resources provided so as to identify evidence on how to promote patient safety in the curriculum for medical schools. This paper includes a perspective from the faculty of a medical school, a major hospital and an Evidence Based Medicine Centre in Sichuan Province, China.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We searched MEDLINE, ERIC, Academic Source Premier(ASP), EMBASE and three Chinese Databases (Chinese Biomedical Literature Database, CBM; China National Knowledge Infrastructure, CNKI; Wangfang Data) from 1980 to Dec. 2009. The pre-specified form of inclusion and exclusion criteria were developed for literature screening. The quality of included studies was assessed using Darcy Reed and Gemma Flores-Mateo criteria. Two reviewers selected the studies, undertook quality assessment, and data extraction independently. Differing opinions were resolved by consensus or with help from the third person.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>This was a descriptive study of a total of seven studies that met the selection criteria. There were no relevant Chinese studies to be included. Only one study included patient safety education in the medical curriculum and the remaining studies integrated patient safety into clinical rotations or medical clerkships. Seven studies were of a pre and post study design, of which there was only one controlled study. There was considerable variation in relation to contents, teaching strategies, faculty knowledge and background in patient safety, other resources and outcome evaluation in these reports. The outcomes from including patient safety in the curriculum as measured by medical students' knowledge, skills, and attitudes varied between the studies.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>There are only a few relevant published studies on the inclusion of patient safety education into the undergraduate curriculum in medical schools either as a selective course, a lecture program, or by being integrated into the existing curriculum even in developed countries with advanced health and education systems. The integration of patient safety education into the existing curriculum in medical schools internationally, provides significant challenges.</p>
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6920/11/33
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