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1.
Risk Manag Healthc Policy ; 16: 1-13, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36636034

ABSTRACT

Background: "Patient Safety" in everyday practices is a target of healthcare leaders, and adverse events reported by healthcare providers directly reflect patient safety in the health system. Recognising how residents and practising physicians rate adverse events concerning their work conditions and burnout must be explored. Objective: This study aims to explore the mediation effect of burnout dimensions (emotional exhaustion and burnout-interpersonal disengagement) between the effects of work conditions on perceived patient safety by exploring the adverse events that residents and practising physicians reported. Methods: A quantitative and cross-sectional study collected data from 249 residents and practising physicians in a huge teaching hospital and primary health care centre (PHC) in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia. Hayes Macro regression analysis was employed to evaluate the multiple mediation effect of burnout dimensions, with 5000 bootstrapping and a confidence interval (CI) of 95% for statistical inference and p≤0.05 for the significance level. Results: Leadership support (B= 0.39, t= 6.24, p<0.001) and physician engagement (B=0.43, t=6.50, p<0.001) were associated with a decreased rate of adverse events to patient safety, whereas workload (B=-0.23, t=-3.73, p<0.001) was negatively associated with an increased rate of adverse events. Burnout was shown to mediate the relationship between the effects of physician's leadership support (R2=0.26, F=27.50, p<0.001), work engagement (R2=0.25, F=27.07, p<0.001) and workload (R2=0.23, F=24.23, p<0.001) on the rate of adverse events. Conclusion: This study provides insights into burnout dimensions and their consequences on patient safety indicators (ie, adverse events). Work conditions (ie, leadership support, physician engagement, and workload) directly affect the rate of adverse events and indirectly through mediators like burnout-emotional exhaustion and burnout-interpersonal disengagement.

2.
Asian J Neurosurg ; 14(3): 1044-1047, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31497162

ABSTRACT

The authors present a patient who had a large occipital meningocele, which was transformed into an encephalocele after primary closure due to a large skull defect. Thus, the technical importance of classifying patients with occipital meningocele with a large skull defect and a tight dural obliteration is crucial, not to leave a wide dead space with a potential risk of cerebellar herniation. Encephalocele and meningocele are embryological anomalies, which result in intracranial structures herniation due to inborn skull defect. Acquired encephalocele may develop through the same defect with normal cerebellar tissues; since the prognosis of occipital encephalocele may worsen as the size of herniation increases, the patient underwent a modified dural obliteration technique (Cable Suturing Technique) to adjust the size of the dura and to strengthen it to prevent the risk of future herniation followed by cranioplasty and the cerebellar herniation regressed significantly after the procedure.

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