Implementing a Peer Support Program for Second Victims.

Am J Nurs

Bernadette Johnson is assistant professor, assistant program director, and clinical director of the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) Nurse Anesthesia Program, Charleston, SC. Luci New is assistant professor and associate director of clinical education in the Department of Academic Nursing, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC. Michele Ballister is a staff certified registered nurse anesthetist (CRNA) at the MUSC, Charleston, SC. Courtney Brown is a staff CRNA III at Novant Health Forsyth Medical Center, Winston-Salem, NC. Susan Scott is adjunct associate professor at the University of Missouri-St Louis, Columbia, MO. Contact author: Bernadette Johnson, The authors have disclosed no potential conflicts of interest, financial or otherwise.

Published: September 2024

The second victim phenomenon describes the distress frequently experienced by health care providers after an unintentional medical error or unexpected adverse event. However, few health care institutions have initiatives that proactively address this phenomenon. The pilot project discussed in this article aimed to create a peer support program for health care providers experiencing the second victim phenomenon. The project team validated the need for such a program among health care providers in the perioperative departments of two facilities within a large health care organization in the southeastern United States. To do this, they used a survey, the Second Victim Experience and Support Tool. Among survey respondents in the two departments, 80% and 87.6% indicated a strong desire to discuss their emotional challenges with a respected peer colleague after a traumatic event. The project team then developed and implemented a peer support program in three phases to 1) educate staff across the facility on second victimization, 2) recruit and train volunteer peer supporters, and 3) launch the pilot program by embedding these peer supporters in the two perioperative departments. A survey completed by participants in the pilot program showed that 80% of respondents found the peer support extremely beneficial, 20% found it very beneficial, and 100% would recommend peer support to a colleague. This successful pilot project could inform the establishment of peer support programs at other institutions to assist health care providers experiencing the second victim phenomenon.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.NAJ.0001050816.14247.78DOI Listing

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