Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/125757
Title: How deep is a problem of second victims for medical staff? A pilot study in Croatia
Authors: Goncharuk, Anatoliy G.
Knežević, Bojana
Buttigieg, Sandra C.
Joaquín Mira, José
Keywords: Medical personnel -- Croatia -- Attitudes
Medical personnel -- Psychology
Medical errors -- Psychological aspects
Medical personnel -- Job stress -- Croatia
Health services administration
Issue Date: 2024
Publisher: Sage Publications Ltd.
Citation: Goncharuk, A. G., Knežević, B., Buttigieg, S. C., & Joaquín Mira, J. (2024). How deep is a problem of second victims for medical staff? A pilot study in Croatia. Journal of Patient Safety and Risk Management, 29(1), 36-46.
Abstract: Adverse events lead to the emergence of several groups of victims, among which the second victims are medical staff involved in them. The suffering of second victims can lead to new adverse events and new victims. This study describes the cycle of an adverse event and its victims. Using the example of the largest Croatian hospital centre, authors try to understand how deep medical staff experience adverse events, and how different groups of medical staff (by profession, gender, qualification, and position) perceive adverse events. With the help of a special survey using the Bonferroni method from ANOVA, it was established that males feel more mental stress after adverse events than females. The results indicate that medical staff of different professions perceive adverse events differently, e.g. they are the least painful for psychiatrists and microbiologists and the most stressing for emergency and intensive care workers. In addition, nurses are more vulnerable to adverse events and experience various types of mental disorders more deeply than doctors. However, qualifications do not seem to affect the extent to which medical staff perceive adverse events. The results of this study differ from previous data for other countries and suggest new implications.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/125757
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacHScHSM



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