Disclosing Medical Errors to Patients: It’s Not What You Say, It’s What They Hear

Adult Male Physician-Patient Relations Deception Adolescent Medical Errors Attitude of Health Personnel Data Collection Middle Aged Truth Disclosure 3. Good health Patient Simulation Young Adult 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Patient Satisfaction Humans Female Physician's Role
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-009-1044-3 Publication Date: 2009-07-03T14:09:53Z
ABSTRACT
There is consensus that patients should be told if they are injured by medical care. However, there is little information on how they react to different methods of disclosure.To determine if volunteers' reactions to videos of physicians disclosing adverse events are related to the physician apologizing and accepting responsibility.Survey of viewers randomized to watch videos of disclosures of three adverse events (missed mammogram, chemotherapy overdose, delay in surgical therapy) with designed variations in extent of apology (full, non-specific, none) and acceptance of responsibility (full, none).Adult volunteer sample from the general community in Baltimore.Viewer evaluations of physicians in the videos using standardized scales.Of 200 volunteers, 50% were <40 years, 25% were female, 80% were African American, and 50% had completed high school. For designed variations, scores were non-significantly higher for full apology/responsibility, and lower for no apology/no responsibility. Perceived apology or responsibility was related to significantly higher ratings (chi-square, 81% vs. 38% trusted; 56% vs. 27% would refer, p < 0.05), but inclination to sue was unchanged (43% vs. 47%). In logistic regression analyses adjusting for age, gender, race and education, perceived apology and perceived responsibility were independently related to higher ratings for all measures. Inclination to sue was reduced non-significantly.Patients will probably respond more favorably to physicians who apologize and accept responsibility for medical errors than those who do not apologize or give ambiguous responses. Patient perceptions of what is said may be more important than what is actually said. Desire to sue may not be affected despite a full apology and acceptance of responsibility.
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