Medical errors in terms of cause, departments of occurring and solutions from the point of view of doctors in Benghazi Medical Center
- Authors
-
-
Lamya S. El Adouli
Department of Health Ad-ministration, Faculty of Public health, University Benghazi, LibyaAuthor -
Gehan F. Elboseifi
Department of Occupational Health, Faculty of Public health, University Benghazi, LibyaAuthor
-
- Keywords:
- Medical Errors, Doctors, Benghazi Medical Center, Cross section study
- Abstract
-
Medical errors negatively affect patients in the first place, medical service providers as well as health organizations in terms of quality. The main purpose of this study was to develop an understanding of medical errors in terms of causes, departments with the highest incidence of them, the most blame for their occurring, and strategies to prevent medical errors from occurring from the perspective of doctors in Benghazi Medical Centre. A cross-sectional design was chosen to conduct this study, and data was collected from doctors working at Benghazi Medical Center. 281 sample random samples were selected at random. The Epi Info tool calculated the sample size with a 95% confidence interval, and the response rate was 100%. The instrument of data collection was a self-administration questionnaire. (SPSS version 22) was used to analyze the collected data. The results show that the most common errors occurred in the emergency room (66. 9%).In addition, it has been found that one of the most important factors that contribute to the occurrence of medical errors was the lack of necessary resources for some tasks (566%).45.6% of doctors blamed the administration and (57.7) seminars and workshops was the best solution to solve the medical errors issue. Results appears that a lack of required resources was generally the main reason for medical errors. Additionally, the emergency room is a typical location for medical errors to occur. Through workshops and seminars, doctors determined the best way to stop medical errors. Additionally, the study participants attributed the occurrence of medical errors to the administration in their respective departments.
- Downloads
-
Download data is not yet available.
- References
-
Abd Elwahab, S., & Doherty, E. (2014). What about doctors? The impact of medical errors. the surgeon, 12(6), 297-300.
Ahmed, Z., Saada, M., Jones, A. M., & Al-Hamid, A. M. (2019). Medical errors: Healthcare professionals’ perspective at a tertiary hospital in Kuwait. PloS one, 14(5), e0217023.
Al-Surimi, K., Almuhayshir, A., Ghailan, K. Y., & Shaheen, N. A. (2022). Impact of Patient Safety Culture on Job Satisfaction and Intention to Leave Among Healthcare Workers: Evidence from Middle East Context. Risk Management and Healthcare Policy, 2435-2451.
Alduais, A. M. S., Mogali, S., Al Shabrain, B., Al Enazi, A., & Al-awad, F. (2014). Barriers and strategies of reporting medical errors in public hospitals in Riyadh city: A survey-study. IOSR Journal of Nursing and Health Science, 3(5), 72-85.
AlJarallah, J. S., & AlRowaiss, N. (2013). The pattern of medical errors and litigation against doctors in Saudi Arabia. Journal of family & community medicine, 20(2), 98.
Alsaleh, F. M., Alsaeed, S., Alsairafi, Z. K., Almandil, N. B., Naser, A. Y., & Bayoud, T. (2021). Medication errors in secondary care hospitals in Kuwait: The Perspectives of healthcare professionals. Frontiers in Medicine, 8, 784315.
Asadi, P., Modirian, E., & Dadashpour, N. (2018). Medical errors in emergency department; a letter to editor. Emergency, 6(1).
Cakmak, C., Demir, H., & Kidak, L. B. (2017). A research on examination of medical errors through court judgments. J Turgut Ozal Med Cent, 24(4), 443-449.
Eisenberg, E. M., Murphy, A. G., Sutcliffe, K., Wears, R., Schenkel, S., Perry, S., & Vanderhoef, M. (2005). Communication in emergency medicine: implications for patient safety. Communication monographs, 72(4), 390-413.
Hannawa, A., Wu, A., & Juhasz, R. (2017). New horizons in patient safety: Understanding communication: Case studies for physicians. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG.
Hannawa, A. F. (2018). “SACCIA Safe Communication”: Five core competencies for safe and high-quality care. Journal of Patient Safety and Risk Management, 23(3), 99-107.
Liederbach, J., Cullen, F. T., Sundt, J. L., & Geis, G. (2001). The criminalization of physician violence: Social control in transformation? Justice Quarterly, 18(1), 141-170.
MacGillivray, T. E. (2020). Advancing the Culture of Patient Safety and Quality Improvement. Methodist DeBakey cardiovascular journal, 16(3), 192.
Maphumulo, W. T., & Bhengu, B. R. (2019). Challenges of quality improvement in the healthcare of South Africa post-apartheid: A critical review. Curationis, 42(1), 1-9.
Moyimane, M. B., Matlala, S. F., & Kekana, M. P. (2017). Experiences of nurses on the critical shortage of medical equipment at a rural district hospital in South Africa: a qualitative study. Pan African Medical Journal, 28(1), 157-157.
Ottosen, M. J., Sedlock, E. W., Aigbe, A. O., Bell, S. K., Gallagher, T. H., & Thomas, E. J. (2018). Long-Term Impacts Faced by Patients and Families After Harmful Healthcare Events. Journal of Patient Safety, 17(8), e1145-e1151.
Plews-Ogan, M., May, N., Owens, J., Ardelt, M., Shapiro, J., & Bell, S. K. (2016). Wisdom in medicine: what helps physicians after a medical error? Academic Medicine, 91(2), 233-241.
[Record #114 is using a reference type undefined in this output style.]
Rowland, M., & Adefuye, A. (2022). Human errors and factors that influence patient safety in the pre-hospital emergency care setting: Perspectives of South African emergency care practitioners. Health SA Gesondheid, 27(1).
Seisser, M. A. (2003). Patient Safety Initiatives Explored at Third Annual Medical Errors and Patient Safety Conference. The Journal for Healthcare Quality (JHQ), 25(2), 47-48.
Tevlin, R., Doherty, E., & Traynor, O. (2013). Improving disclosure and management of medical error–an opportunity to transform the surgeons of tomorrow. the surgeon, 11(6), 338-343.
W.H.O, W. H. O. (2022). Global atlas of medical devices 2022.
Waterman, A. D., Garbutt, J., Hazel, E., Dunagan, W. C., Levinson, W., Fraser, V. J., & Gallagher, T. H. (2007). The emotional impact of medical errors on practicing physicians in the United States and Canada. The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety, 33(8), 467-476.
Weingart, N. S., Wilson, R. M., Gibberd, R. W., & Harrison, B. (2000). Epidemiology of medical error. Bmj, 320(7237), 774-777.
Zimmer, M., Czarniecki, D. M., & Sahm, S. (2021). Communication of preclinical emergency teams in critical situations: A nationwide study. PloS one, 16(5), e0250932.
- Downloads
- Published
- 2023-12-31
- Issue
- Vol. 38 No. 4 (2023)
- Section
- Articles
- License
-
Copyright (c) 2023 Lamya S. El Adouli, Gehan F. Elboseifi (Author)

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Copyright of the articles Published by Almukhtar Journal of Science (MJSc) is retained by the author(s), who grant MJSc a license to publish the article. Authors also grant any third party the right to use the article freely as long as its integrity is maintained and its original authors and cite MJSc as the original publisher. Also, they accept the article remains published by the MJSc website (except in the occasion of a retraction of the article).
How to Cite
Similar Articles
- Muftah H. Elkhafifi, Abdulsalam A. Nabous, Ali T. Muftah, Giant Vesical Calculus Presented with Anuria in a Young Male Patient: A Case Report , Al-Mukhtar Journal of Sciences: Vol. 39 No. 3 (2024)
- Nadia Al Rwab, Samira Al-Agouri, Nagwa Hamed, Hussien Amgawer, Relationship Between Calcium Ion Concentration and Thyroid- Stimulating Hormone in Libyan Women , Al-Mukhtar Journal of Sciences: Vol. 39 No. 2 (2024)
- Mabrouk S. Bohalfaya, Idris M. Tajoury, Hosam A. Ibraheem, Rehabilitation Followings Surgical Fixation of Bimalleolar Fractures , Al-Mukhtar Journal of Sciences: Vol. 38 No. 3 (2023)
- Raul I. Gambalan, Janette L. Calo, Jerlinda P. Roa, Salih A. S. Alsalimi, Compliance of Hand Hygiene Among Health Care Professionals and Allied Health Workers in the Prevention of Bacterial Contamination , Al-Mukhtar Journal of Sciences: Vol. 38 No. 4 (2023)
- Nasren G. S. Alfraik, Amera M. Mohmed, Aya S. Balhouq, Doaa F. Salih, Rajaa J. Saleh, Sana B. Aqoub, Obesogenic Factors in School-Aged Children in Tobruk City, Libya , Al-Mukhtar Journal of Sciences: Vol. 40 No. 1 (2025)
- Fatima E. Ahmed, Susan A. Zroog, Yassin H. M. Nor-Aldaiem, Nurses’ Knowledge Regarding Pediatric Febrile Convulsions and its Nursing Care , Al-Mukhtar Journal of Sciences: Vol. 40 No. 1 (2025)
- Agzail S. Elhddad, Faiza M. Younis, Does assisted reproductive technology has effect on human secondary sex ratio? , Al-Mukhtar Journal of Sciences: Vol. 38 No. 4 (2023)
- Abdurraouf. M. Aghila, Saad. S. Saad, Faraj A. Elmasrub, Electron Beams Commissioning and Initial Measurements on an Elekta Synergy Platform Linear Accelerator , Al-Mukhtar Journal of Sciences: Vol. 38 No. 4 (2023)
- Aeshah A. Altayf, The Level of 25-Hydroxy Vitamin D3 in Gingival Crevicular fluid and Serum Pre-Post Scaling and Root Planning in Chronic Periodontitis Patients in Western Libya: Comparative Study , Al-Mukhtar Journal of Sciences: Vol. 38 No. 4 (2023)
- Dorothy Buhat-Mendoza, Marilou M. Gravides, James Neil Mendoza, Correlation Between Health Assessment and RLE 2 Courses at Tobruk University , Al-Mukhtar Journal of Sciences: Vol. 39 No. 1 (2024)
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.









