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Why don’t we do positivity rounds?

Navpreet Sahsi, MD
Physician
August 25, 2020
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We love our morbidity and mortality rounds in medicine. A time when we can look over some medical mistakes and take some time to analyze what went wrong. We debate, criticize, and some of us like to imagine that we’d never make such an egregious error.

But why are we always paying attention to the negative outcomes?

One perspective is that it’s a function of how our minds work. Our minds are interesting machines. We know that we are much more primed to avoid bad outcomes than to seek out favorable ones.

As well, we have a negativity bias, meaning that negative events and outcomes have a much greater effect on us than positive ones.

Another perspective is that it’s a part of our culture. In many ways, our medical culture is one of negativity. We tend to be Type A, perfectionistic, hard striving people, always looking to be better and often trying to one-up each other. We argue frequently. We judge each other.

And face it, we sometimes love it when our colleagues make mistakes.

But we all make mistakes at times. In the ER, where I work, we are constantly making difficult decisions with a great degree of uncertainly. It’s impossible to be right all of the time. Sometimes, well thought out decisions don’t work out.

So by reviewing an error, there’s a relief in knowing that your peers are just as fallible as you are. That you’re not alone.

It might also serve to actually make us feel a little better about our own practice.

It’s in our nature to compare ourselves to our peers. We all like to think that we’re doing a good job l, and I surmise that we think that we’re doing a little bit better than our colleagues. When mistakes happen, it just adds to that belief a bit more.

So, I’m not here to say that we shouldn’t pay attention to our mistakes. When a medical mistake happens, it’s certainly a great opportunity for us all to learn. We want to know what went wrong and what we can do to prevent something bad from happening again.

But there is a downside to all of this focus on error. We have a burnout problem in medicine, and with all the difficulties in our jobs, it can often be hard to remember the things that went well.

We go home and perseverate on the mistakes, difficulties, and stresses we’ve had. Our expectations are so ridiculously high that we gloss over all the things we actually did well.

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Isn’t it time that we also start celebrating the successes in medicine?

So many times, things go right, and patients get better.

Someone comes into our ER with vague symptoms, or a lot of pain, and through your own intuition and training, you decide to do the right investigations. Perhaps you’re able to make a diagnosis and treatment plan right on the spot. And then that patient heals and gets better. Goes on to live for a long time.

Congrats. You’ve just made an incredible impact on another human being’s life.

And that should be celebrated too. What we do on a daily basis is truly an incredible thing.

Don’t forget the successes.

I think we as doctors ignore these kinds of positive outcomes because we expect that this is the way things are supposed to go. In our twisted, perfect, ideal, we are always supposed to make the right diagnoses, and things are supposed to get better.

But anyone with any actual medical experience knows that this truly isn’t the case. Things are messy. Mistakes are made. And sometimes people don’t get better, even when everything goes right.

So I am advocating for you and your group to throw in some positivity rounds now and again. Forget the mistakes for a week. Discuss a few cases where things went right, and you had successful outcomes.

If you’re able, bring in patients to talk about their experiences and the impact that was had on their lives.

Imagine how nice it would feel to revel in our successes for a change. There’s a lot of them, and it’s important to look once in a while.

We do amazing work. But it’s important to remind ourselves of that often.

Navpreet Sahsi is an emergency physician who blogs at Physician, Heal Thyself.

Image credit: Shutterstock.com

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