• Der Unfallchirurg · Oct 2016

    [Interpersonal competence in orthopedics and traumatology : Why technical and procedural skills alone are not sufficient].

    • R Seemann, M Münzberg, R Stange, M Rüsseler, M Egerth, B Bouillon, R Hoffmann, and M Mutschler.
    • Centrum für Muskuloskeletale Chirurgie, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Deutschland. ricarda.seemann@charite.de.
    • Unfallchirurg. 2016 Oct 1; 119 (10): 881-4.

    AbstractPatient safety has increasingly gained significance as criterion which clinics and doctors will be measured against in terms of ethics and finances. The "human factor" moved into focus regarding the question of how to reduce treatment errors in clinical daily routine. Nevertheless, systematic mediation of interpersonal competences only plays a minor role in the catalogue of requirements for medical specialization and professional training. This is the case not only in orthopedics and traumatology, but in other medical fields as well. At the insistence of DGOU and in cooperation with Lufthansa Flight Training, a training model was initiated, comparable to training models used in aviation. In aviation, apart from the training of procedural and technical abilities, regular soft skills training has become standard in the training of all Lufthansa staff. Several studies confirm that by improving communication, interaction, and teamwork skills not only a reduction of intolerable incidents is observed, but also a positive economic effect. Interpersonal competences should be firmly anchored in orthopedics and traumatology and thus be implemented as third post in specialist training.

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