98%
921
2 minutes
20
Objective: The aim of the study was to validate a revised version of the Second Victim Experience and Support Tool (SVEST-R). The SVEST survey instrument was developed to measure the emotional and professional impact of medical errors and adverse patient events on healthcare providers and can help healthcare organizations evaluate the effectiveness of support resources.
Methods: An SVEST-R was completed by 316 healthcare providers from seven neonatal intensive care units affiliated with a large, pediatric hospital. The original 29-item measure was expanded to 43 items to assess eight psychosocial domains (psychological distress, physical distress, colleague support, supervisor support, institutional support, nonwork-related support, professional self-efficacy, resilience) and two employment-related domains (turnover intentions, absenteeism) associated with the second victim experience. Seven additional items assessed desired forms of support (e.g., time away from the unit). A confirmatory factor analysis evaluated the factor structure of the modified measure.
Results: The initial confirmatory factor analysis did not reveal an acceptable factor structure; thus, eight items were removed because of inadequate factor loadings or for conceptual reasons. This resulted in an acceptable model for the final 35-item measure. The final version included nine factors (i.e., psychological distress, physical distress, colleague support, supervisor support, institutional support, professional self-efficacy, resilience, turnover intentions, and absenteeism), with Cronbach α ranging from 0.66 to 0.86.
Conclusions: The SVEST-R is a valid measure for assessing the impact of errors or adverse events on healthcare providers. Importantly, the SVEST-R now includes positive outcomes (i.e., resilience) that may result from the second victim experience.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/PTS.0000000000000659 | DOI Listing |
JAAPA
September 2025
Samantha Saggese practices in the Division of Nephrology and Hypertension at Northwestern Memorial Hospital and is system advanced practice provider liaison to the Office of Well-being at Northwestern Medicine, both in Chicago, IL. Alexander Hembrey practices orthopedic surgery and is APP program ma
Objective: This study aimed to measure the impact of adverse events (AEs) on advanced practice provider (APP) well-being and to describe symptoms of second victim syndrome (SVS) among this group of healthcare professionals.
Methods: A survey was designed to measure the incidence of AEs among APPs employed at a large healthcare system and AE impact on emotional, physical, and professional well-being. It also measured burnout, callousness, and the desire for peer support among APPs who had experienced AEs and those who had not.
Rev Infirm
September 2025
Faculté des sciences infirmières, Pavillon Ferdinand-Vandry, local 3463, Université Laval, Québec, G1V 0A6, Canada. Electronic address:
While we work with patients when they are victims of an adverse event in their care, we too often ignore the fact that the caregiver also experiences the consequences of this event. Some of these events lengthen hospital stays, aggravate health problems and can even lead to death. For the caregivers involved, as well as for the health-care teams, the effects are far from negligible in terms of affect and psychological suffering.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Rev Psychol
September 2025
2Department of Psychology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Around the turn of the millennium, the social representation of minorities in Western societies shifted from marginalized deviants to victims of injustice, prompting calls for recognition and reparation. Drawing on the social identity tradition, we argue that this shift in representation gave rise to new identity needs, with victim groups seeking to restore their agentic identity and perpetrator groups their moral identity. We review two research trends that emerged from this shift in representation and its relationship to identity needs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF