Second victim

Revision as of 13:20, 26 February 2017 by Teledoc4u (talk | contribs)

Background

  • Second victims are healthcare providers in the midst of a medical mistake or error and become victimized because of their role.
  • University of Missouri Health canter found almost 1in 7 staff reported experiencing a patient safety event resulting in personal disturbed emotions.[1]

Clinical Features

  • Immediate.
    • Stress related psychological and physical reactions:
      • Sadness, Fear, shame and anger
      • Panicking, horrified and apprehensive.
      • Sympathomimetic reaction with tachypnea, tachycardia, elevated blood pressure and difficulty concentrating.
      • Lonliness and fear of being called names and losing job.
  • Subsequent.
    • Fear of returning to work.
      • Loss of confidence.
      • Self doubt, remorse.
      • Hypervigilence, second guessing everything.
  • Ongoing till resolved.
    • Characteristics of PTSD (inability to process the feeling of fear, sadness, guilt and shame).
    • Resulting in:
      • Insomnia, flashbacks and thoughts of suicide.
      • Damaged self perception.
      • Loss of self security.

Differential Diagnosis

  • Anxiety neurosis.
  • Thyrotoxicosis.
  • PTSD.
  • Depression.

Evaluation

  • The second victim should be treated on urgent basis.
  • Second victim code should be announced and a separate team should provide help to the person, besides the team evaluating the incidence.

Management

  • Five rights of the second victim.[2]
    • Treatment that is just.
    • Respect.
    • Understanding and compassion.
    • Suppostive care.
    • Transparency and opprtunity to contribute.
  • Recovery process of the second victim.

1# Chaos and accident response. 2# Intrusive reflections. 3# Restoring personal integrety. 4# Enduring the inquisition. 5# Obtaining emotional first aid. 6# Moving on. Which can lead to either of the three. 1## Dropping out. 2## Surviving. 3## Thriving.

See Also

External Links

https://archive.ahrq.gov/news/newsroom/commentaries/second-victim-syndrome.html

References

  1. Scott SD. The "second victim" phenomenon: a harsh reality of health care professions. AHRQ; WebM&M Perspectives on Safety; May 2011.
  2. Denham CR.TRUST: the 5 rights of the second victim. J Patient Saf. 2007; 3: 107-119