Abstract
ObjectiveCritical care transport is a high-risk environment ripe for patient safety incidents (PSIs). Disclosure is the process by which a PSI is communicated to a patient or substitute decision maker. Little is known on paramedic perceptions on disclosure PSIs. This study evaluated the impact of a disclosure training program on the perceptions of paramedics on disclosing PSIs. MethodsThis was a before-and-after mixed methods survey study on paramedic disclosure training at Ornge, the provincial critical care transport organization for Ontario, Canada. A paramedic disclosure training program was implemented at Ornge between 2020 and 2022. All paramedics were eligible for participation through pre- and posttraining surveys. ResultsIn total, 54 and 69 paramedics completed the pretraining and posttraining surveys, respectively, representing 25% to 30% of all active paramedics. All of the paramedics (100%) expressed a moral and professional responsibility to disclose PSIs. All paramedics felt disclosure training was somewhat to extremely useful. After training, more paramedics felt comfortable disclosing PSIs, and more paramedics felt disclosure could occur at the time of transport. ConclusionA training program on PSIs can improve paramedics’ perceptions on disclosure. This study shows its feasible for paramedics to feel comfortable and participate in disclosure of PSIs within a critical care environment.
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