Debrief it all: a tool for inclusion of Safety-II

Abstract Safety science in healthcare has historically focused primarily on reducing risk and minimizing harm by learning everything possible from when things go wrong (Safety-I). Safety-II encourages the study of all events, including the routine and mundane, not only bad outcomes. While debriefing...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Suzanne K. Bentley, Shannon McNamara, Michael Meguerdichian, Katie Walker, Mary Patterson, Komal Bajaj
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-03-01
Series:Advances in Simulation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s41077-021-00163-3
id doaj-4fa351c0d5334b2baeabe55cc83088e5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4fa351c0d5334b2baeabe55cc83088e52021-04-04T11:22:41ZengBMCAdvances in Simulation2059-06282021-03-01611610.1186/s41077-021-00163-3Debrief it all: a tool for inclusion of Safety-IISuzanne K. Bentley0Shannon McNamara1Michael Meguerdichian2Katie Walker3Mary Patterson4Komal Bajaj5Departments of Emergency Medicine and Medical Education, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount SinaiDepartment of Emergency Medicine, NYU Langone HealthSimulation Center of NYC Health + HospitalsSimulation Center of NYC Health + HospitalsDepartment of Emergency Medicine, College of Medicine of the University of FloridaSimulation Center of NYC Health + HospitalsAbstract Safety science in healthcare has historically focused primarily on reducing risk and minimizing harm by learning everything possible from when things go wrong (Safety-I). Safety-II encourages the study of all events, including the routine and mundane, not only bad outcomes. While debriefing and learning from positive events is not uncommon or new to simulation, many common debriefing strategies are more focused on Safety-I. The lack of inclusion of Safety-II misses out on the powerful analysis of everyday work. A debriefing tool highlighting Safety-II concepts was developed through expert consensus and piloting and is offered as a guide to encourage and facilitate inclusion of Safety-II analysis into debriefings. It allows for debriefing expansion from the focus on error analysis and “what went wrong” or “could have gone better” to now also capture valuable discussion of high yield Safety-II concepts such as capacities, adjustments, variation, and adaptation for successful operations in a complex system. Additionally, debriefing inclusive of Safety-II fosters increased debriefing overall by encouraging debriefing when “things go right”, not historically what is most commonly debriefed.https://doi.org/10.1186/s41077-021-00163-3Safety-IIDebriefingSimulationErrorPatient safety
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Suzanne K. Bentley
Shannon McNamara
Michael Meguerdichian
Katie Walker
Mary Patterson
Komal Bajaj
spellingShingle Suzanne K. Bentley
Shannon McNamara
Michael Meguerdichian
Katie Walker
Mary Patterson
Komal Bajaj
Debrief it all: a tool for inclusion of Safety-II
Advances in Simulation
Safety-II
Debriefing
Simulation
Error
Patient safety
author_facet Suzanne K. Bentley
Shannon McNamara
Michael Meguerdichian
Katie Walker
Mary Patterson
Komal Bajaj
author_sort Suzanne K. Bentley
title Debrief it all: a tool for inclusion of Safety-II
title_short Debrief it all: a tool for inclusion of Safety-II
title_full Debrief it all: a tool for inclusion of Safety-II
title_fullStr Debrief it all: a tool for inclusion of Safety-II
title_full_unstemmed Debrief it all: a tool for inclusion of Safety-II
title_sort debrief it all: a tool for inclusion of safety-ii
publisher BMC
series Advances in Simulation
issn 2059-0628
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract Safety science in healthcare has historically focused primarily on reducing risk and minimizing harm by learning everything possible from when things go wrong (Safety-I). Safety-II encourages the study of all events, including the routine and mundane, not only bad outcomes. While debriefing and learning from positive events is not uncommon or new to simulation, many common debriefing strategies are more focused on Safety-I. The lack of inclusion of Safety-II misses out on the powerful analysis of everyday work. A debriefing tool highlighting Safety-II concepts was developed through expert consensus and piloting and is offered as a guide to encourage and facilitate inclusion of Safety-II analysis into debriefings. It allows for debriefing expansion from the focus on error analysis and “what went wrong” or “could have gone better” to now also capture valuable discussion of high yield Safety-II concepts such as capacities, adjustments, variation, and adaptation for successful operations in a complex system. Additionally, debriefing inclusive of Safety-II fosters increased debriefing overall by encouraging debriefing when “things go right”, not historically what is most commonly debriefed.
topic Safety-II
Debriefing
Simulation
Error
Patient safety
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s41077-021-00163-3
work_keys_str_mv AT suzannekbentley debriefitallatoolforinclusionofsafetyii
AT shannonmcnamara debriefitallatoolforinclusionofsafetyii
AT michaelmeguerdichian debriefitallatoolforinclusionofsafetyii
AT katiewalker debriefitallatoolforinclusionofsafetyii
AT marypatterson debriefitallatoolforinclusionofsafetyii
AT komalbajaj debriefitallatoolforinclusionofsafetyii
_version_ 1721542718110302208