Korean Med Educ Rev.  2019 Feb;21(1):1-12. 10.17496/kmer.2019.21.1.1.

Patient Safety Education for Medical Students: Global Trends and Korea's Status

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Medical Education, Inje University College of Medicine, Busan, Korea. hyerinr@gmail.com
  • 2The Institute for Medical Humanities, Inje University, Busan, Korea.

Abstract

This study is a narrative review introducing global trends in patient safety education within medical schools and exploring the status of Korean education. Core competences for patient safety include patient centeredness, teamwork, evidence- and information-based practice, quality improvement, addressing medical errors, managing human factors and system complexity, and patient safety knowledge and responsibility. According to a Korean report addressing the role of doctors, patient safety was described as a subcategory of clinical care. Doctors' roles in patient safety included taking precautions, educating patients about the side effects of drugs, and implementing rapid treatment and appropriate follow-up when patient safety is compromised. The Korean Association of Medical Colleges suggested patient safety competence as one of eight essential human and society-centered learning outcomes. They included appropriate attitude and knowledge, human factors, a systematic approach, teamwork skills, engaging with patients and carers, and dealing with common errors. Four Korean medical schools reported integration of a patient safety course in their preclinical curriculum. Studies have shown that students experience difficulty in reporting medical errors because of hierarchical culture. It seems that patient safety is considered in a narrow sense and its education is limited in Korea. Patient safety is not a topic for dealing with only adverse events, but a science to prevent and detect early system failure. Patient safety emphasizes patient perspectives, so it has a different paradigm of medical ethics and professionalism, which have doctor-centered perspectives. Medical educators in Korea should understand patient safety concepts to implement patient safety curriculum. Further research should be done on communication in hierarchical culture and patient safety education during clerkship.

Keyword

Curriculum; Medical errors; Medical students; Undergraduate medical education

MeSH Terms

Caregivers
Curriculum
Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions
Education*
Education, Medical, Undergraduate
Ethics, Medical
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Korea
Learning
Medical Errors
Mental Competency
Patient Safety*
Professionalism
Quality Improvement
Schools, Medical
Students, Medical*
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