Operating theatre teams work in an imperfect system characterised by time pressure, goal conflicts, lack of team stability and steep authority gradients between consultants and other team members. Despite this, they often foresee and forestall errors that could harm patients. The paper discusses the strengths and limitations of using Reason's three buckets model of error prevention as a framework for training operating theatre staff how to foresee and forestall incidents.
AvelingE.L., McCullochP., Dixon-WoodsM.2013A qualitative study comparing experiences of the surgical safety checklist in hospitals in high-income and low-income countriesBritish Medical Journal Open3: e003039 doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003039 Available from: http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/3/8/e003039.full.pdf+html [Accessed December 2013]
2.
BehnkeL.2004Mental skills training for sports: a brief reviewAthletic Insight: The Online Journal of Sports Psychology6(1) 1–19
3.
BoakesE.2009Using foresight in safe nursing careJournal of Nursing Management17(2) 212–7
4.
CartheyJ., de LevalM.R., ReasonJ.T.2001The ‘human factor’ in cardiac surgery: Errors and near misses in a high technology medical domainAnnals of Thoracic Surgery72300–5
ReasonJ.2004Beyond the organisational accident: the need for ‘error wisdom’ on the frontlineQuality and Safety in Healthcare13 Suppl 228–33
11.
WeinbergR.S.1984The relationship between extrinsic rewards and intrinsic motivation In: SilvaJ.M., WeinbergR.S. (eds) Psychological Foundations of Sport177–87Illinois, Human Kinetics