Nov 13, 2024 11:16 PM
(This post was last modified: Nov 13, 2024 11:46 PM by C C.)
https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1064749
INTRO: With the pervasiveness of harassment, incivility, and disrespect (HID) among health care professionals in the workplace impacting clinician well-being, patient health, and disproportionately affecting anesthesiology, the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) is providing new recommendations to help eradicate these behaviors in the operating room and hospitals.
“There is no place for harassment, incivility or disrespect of any kind in the operating room,” said ASA President Donald E. Arnold, M.D., FACHE, FASA. “When these behaviors are demonstrated in the workplace, they negatively affect personal and team performance, adversely impacting patient safety, quality of care and outcomes. Furthermore, these behaviors strongly affect the growing imbalance in the supply of anesthesiologists and anesthesia care professionals that we are seeing. The work environment and culture of a health care facility has a direct correlation to its ability to recruit and retain staff.”
Data shows the rate of HID in anesthesiology is equal to, if not higher, than other specialties. Additionally, according to a report by the Association of American Medical Colleges, there is a persistent presence of gender harassment across all medical specialties in academic medicine, with approximately 1 in 3 of all female faculty and 1 in 10 of all male faculty having reported sexual harassment. Within anesthesiology specifically, 1 in 2 women and 1 in 4 men reported experiencing a form of sexual harassment in the past 12 months.
HID impacts both clinician and patient health. According to the new recommendations, the spectrum of these disruptive behaviors can negatively affect an anesthesiologist’s personal, as well as the anesthesia care team’s, performance through adverse safety consequences including poor information sharing, compromised decision-making, diagnostic error, and burnout.
The recommendations prioritize commitments and actions that should be made both organizationally and on an individual level for the benefit of patients, anesthesiologists, and all members of anesthesia and surgical care teams.
Some of the organizational commitments and actions include... (MORE - details, no ads)
INTRO: With the pervasiveness of harassment, incivility, and disrespect (HID) among health care professionals in the workplace impacting clinician well-being, patient health, and disproportionately affecting anesthesiology, the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) is providing new recommendations to help eradicate these behaviors in the operating room and hospitals.
“There is no place for harassment, incivility or disrespect of any kind in the operating room,” said ASA President Donald E. Arnold, M.D., FACHE, FASA. “When these behaviors are demonstrated in the workplace, they negatively affect personal and team performance, adversely impacting patient safety, quality of care and outcomes. Furthermore, these behaviors strongly affect the growing imbalance in the supply of anesthesiologists and anesthesia care professionals that we are seeing. The work environment and culture of a health care facility has a direct correlation to its ability to recruit and retain staff.”
Data shows the rate of HID in anesthesiology is equal to, if not higher, than other specialties. Additionally, according to a report by the Association of American Medical Colleges, there is a persistent presence of gender harassment across all medical specialties in academic medicine, with approximately 1 in 3 of all female faculty and 1 in 10 of all male faculty having reported sexual harassment. Within anesthesiology specifically, 1 in 2 women and 1 in 4 men reported experiencing a form of sexual harassment in the past 12 months.
HID impacts both clinician and patient health. According to the new recommendations, the spectrum of these disruptive behaviors can negatively affect an anesthesiologist’s personal, as well as the anesthesia care team’s, performance through adverse safety consequences including poor information sharing, compromised decision-making, diagnostic error, and burnout.
The recommendations prioritize commitments and actions that should be made both organizationally and on an individual level for the benefit of patients, anesthesiologists, and all members of anesthesia and surgical care teams.
Some of the organizational commitments and actions include... (MORE - details, no ads)
