Regret is an unavoidable corollary of clinical practice. Physicians and nurses perform countless clinical decisions and actions, in a context characterised by time pressure, information overload, complexity and uncertainty.To explore feelings associated with regretted clinical decisions or interventions of hospital-based physicians and nurses and to examine how these regrets are coped with.Qualitative study of a volunteer sample of 12 physicians and 13 nurses from Swiss University Hospitals using semi-structured interviews and thematic analysisAll interviewees reported at least one intense regret, which sometimes led to sleep problems, or taking sickness leave. Respondents also reported an accumulation effect of small and large regrets, whi...
Background: Every year, 14 % of patients in Norwegian hospitals experience adverse events, which oft...
BACKGROUND: Previous research has established health professionals as secondary victims of medical e...
Nurses exhibit higher rates of presenteeism than other professionals, with consequences for the qual...
Regret is an unavoidable corollary of clinical practice. Physicians and nurses perform countless cli...
BACKGROUND: Regret is an unavoidable corollary of clinical practice. Physicians and nurses perform c...
Moral distress – such as feeling strong regret over difficult patient situations – is common among n...
Regret is an unavoidable corollary of clinical practice. Physicians and nurses perform countless cli...
Despite the great satisfaction they can find in their work, healthcare professionals are particularl...
Physicians and nurses are expected to systematically provide high-quality healthcare in a context ma...
To examine the association between healthcare-related regrets and sleep difficulties among nurses an...
Objectives: To investigate 1) whether care-related regrets (regret intensity, number of recent regre...
Background: Experienced and anticipated regret influence physicians’ decision-making. In medicine, d...
BACKGROUND: The regret intensity scale (RIS) and the regret coping scale for healthcare professional...
Introduction Healthcare professionals are particularly at risk of developing numerous physical and p...
Background Decision-making relies on both analytical and emotional thinking. Cognitive reasoning sty...
Background: Every year, 14 % of patients in Norwegian hospitals experience adverse events, which oft...
BACKGROUND: Previous research has established health professionals as secondary victims of medical e...
Nurses exhibit higher rates of presenteeism than other professionals, with consequences for the qual...
Regret is an unavoidable corollary of clinical practice. Physicians and nurses perform countless cli...
BACKGROUND: Regret is an unavoidable corollary of clinical practice. Physicians and nurses perform c...
Moral distress – such as feeling strong regret over difficult patient situations – is common among n...
Regret is an unavoidable corollary of clinical practice. Physicians and nurses perform countless cli...
Despite the great satisfaction they can find in their work, healthcare professionals are particularl...
Physicians and nurses are expected to systematically provide high-quality healthcare in a context ma...
To examine the association between healthcare-related regrets and sleep difficulties among nurses an...
Objectives: To investigate 1) whether care-related regrets (regret intensity, number of recent regre...
Background: Experienced and anticipated regret influence physicians’ decision-making. In medicine, d...
BACKGROUND: The regret intensity scale (RIS) and the regret coping scale for healthcare professional...
Introduction Healthcare professionals are particularly at risk of developing numerous physical and p...
Background Decision-making relies on both analytical and emotional thinking. Cognitive reasoning sty...
Background: Every year, 14 % of patients in Norwegian hospitals experience adverse events, which oft...
BACKGROUND: Previous research has established health professionals as secondary victims of medical e...
Nurses exhibit higher rates of presenteeism than other professionals, with consequences for the qual...