Medical error: the second victim
When I was a house officer
another resident failed to identify the electrocardiographic signs of
the pericardial tamponade that would rush the patient to the operating
room late that night. The news spread rapidly, the case tried
repeatedly before an incredulous jury of peers, who returned a summary
judgment of incompetence. I was dismayed by the lack of sympathy and
wondered secretly if I could have made the same mistake-and, like the
hapless resident, become the second victim of the error.
Strangely, there is no place for mistakes in modern medicine. Society
has entrusted physicians with the burden of understanding and dealing
with illness. Although it is often said that "doctors are only
human," technological wonders, the apparent precision of
laboratory tests, and innovations that present tangible images of
illness have in fact created an expectation of perfection. Patients,
who have an understandable need to consider their doctors infallible,
have colluded with doctors to deny the existence of error. Hospitals
react to every error as an anomaly, for which the solution is to ferret
out and blame an individual, with a promise that "it will never
happen again." Paradoxically, this approach has diverted attention
from the kind of systematic improvements that could decrease errors.
Many errors are built into existing routines and devices, setting up
the unwitting physician and patient for disaster. And, although
patients are the first and obvious victims of medical mistakes, doctors
are wounded by the same errors: they are the second victims.
Virtually every practitioner knows the sickening realisation of making
a bad mistake. You feel singled out and exposed-seized by the instinct
to see if anyone has noticed. You agonise about what to do, whether to
tell anyone, what to say. Later, the event replays itself over and over
in your mind. You question your competence but fear being discovered.
You know you should confess, but dread the prospect of potential
punishment and of the patient's anger. You may become overly attentive
to the patient or family, lamenting the failure to do so earlier and,
if you haven't told them, wondering if they know.1-3
Sadly, the kind of unconditional sympathy and support that is really
needed is rarely forthcoming. While there is a norm of not
criticising,4 reassurance from colleagues is often
grudging or qualified. One reason may be that learning of the failings
of others allows physicians to divest their own past errors among the
group, making them feel less exposed.5 It has been
suggested that the only way to face the guilt after a serious error is
through confession, restitution, and absolution.6 But
confession is discouraged, passively by the lack of appropriate forums
for discussion, and sometimes actively by risk managers and hospital
lawyers. Further, there are no institutional mechanisms to aid the
grieving process. Even when mistakes are discussed at morbidity and
mortality conferences, it is to examine the medical facts rather than
the feelings of the patient or physician.
In the absence of mechanisms for healing, physicians find dysfunctional
ways to protect themselves. They often respond to their own mistakes
with anger and projection of blame, and may act defensively or
callously and blame or scold the patient or other members of the
healthcare team. Distress escalates in the face of a malpractice suit.
In the long run some physicians are deeply wounded, lose their nerve,
burn out, or seek solace in alcohol or drugs.6 My
observation is that this number includes some of our most reflective
and sensitive colleagues, perhaps most susceptible to injury from their
own mistakes.
What should we do when a colleague makes a mistake? How would we like
others to react to our mistakes? How can we make it feel safe to talk
about mistakes? In the case of an individual colleague it is important
to encourage a description of what happened, and to begin by accepting
this assessment and not minimising the importance of the mistake.
Disclosing one's own experience of mistakes can reduce the
colleague's sense of isolation. It is helpful to ask about and
acknowledge the emotional impact of the mistake and ask how the
colleague is coping.
If the patient or family is not aware of the mistake the
importance of disclosure should be discussed. The physician has an
ethical responsibility to tell the patient about an error, especially
if the error has caused harm.7 We should acknowledge the
pain of implementing this imperative. However, we can convey the great
relief it can be to admit a mistake, and that, confronted by an
empathetic and apologetic physician, patients and families can be
astonishingly forgiving. Only then is it appropriate to approach the
mistake with a problem solving focus, to explore what could have been
done differently, and what changes can be made at the individual and
institution level to prevent recurrence. In the case of the misread
electrocardiograph the educational and emotional experience for the
resident-and the team-would have been transformed if a respected
senior clinician had led an open discussion of the incident and
acknowledged the inevitability of mistakes.
Nurses, pharmacists, and other members of the healthcare team are also
susceptible to error and vulnerable to its fallout. Given the hospital
hierarchy, they have less latitude to deal with their mistakes: they
often bear silent witness to mistakes and agonise over conflicting
loyalties to patient, institution, and team. They too are victims.
I'll conclude with an assignment for the practising doctor: think back
to your last mistake that harmed a patient. Talk to a colleague about
it. Notice your colleague's reactions, and your own. What helps? What
makes it harder? Physicians will always make mistakes. The decisive
factor will be how we handle them. Patient safety and physician welfare
will be well served if we can be more honest about our mistakes to our
patients, our colleagues, and ourselves.
Albert W Wu, associate professor, School of Hygiene and Public Health and School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA
Email: awu@jhsph.edu
studentBMJ 2000;08:131-174 May ISSN 0966-6494
- Wu AW, Folkman S, McPhee SJ, Lo B. Do house officers learn from their mistakes? JAMA 1991;265:2089-94.
- Christensen JF, Levinson W, Dunn PM. The heart of darkness: the impact of perceived mistakes on physicians. J Gen Intern Med 1992;7:424-31.
- Newman MC. The emotional impact of mistakes on family physicians. Arch Fam Med 1996;5:71-5.
- Rosenthal MM. The incompetent doctor. Behind closed doors. Buckingham: Open University Press, 1995.
- Terry JS, Fricchione GL. Facing limitation and failure. The Pharos 1985;Fall:13-8.
- Hilfiker D. Healing the wounds. A physician looks at his work. New York: Penguin, 1985.
- Wu AW, Cavanaugh TA, McPhee SJ, Lo B, Micco GP. To tell the truth - ethical and practical issues in disclosing medical mistakes to patients. J Gen Intern Med 1997;12:770-5.