The
Joint Commission has issued a safety alert announcing new requirements
for preventing intimidating behavior by doctors. In its statement, the
Joint Commission noted that physician threats, outbursts and the use of
condescending language, among other behaviors, can make nurses afraid
to challenge doctors when they're concerned about potential problems.
This can lead to increased medical errors, the group said. (Readers of
this publication [FierceHealthcare] have all heard tales of, for example, wrong-side or
wrong-organ surgery that went ahead because Dr. X wouldn't listen to
nurses.)
Nurses who feel bullied aren't just afraid to challenge
doctors they feel are making mistakes. They may even be afraid to call
them with routine questions, which can lead to patient care problems,
researchers have noted. Worse, nurses may make mistakes themselves, due
to stress, after having a particularly stressful encounter with a
bullying doctor.
However, the Joint Commission hopes to reduce
these incidents dramatically. By next year, hospitals will be required
to have codes of conduct and processes in place for managing
inappropriate behavior by medical staff, including a policy
specifically defining acceptable and unacceptable behavior. If they
don't, the penalties will be stiff. Hospitals without appropriate
anti-bullying systems in place could lose their all-important Joint
Commission accreditation.
To learn more about the Joint Commission's ruling:
- read this Associated Press piece
- read the Joint Commission statement
Source: FierceHealthcare July 10, 2008