Published December 8, 2025 | Version v1
Journal article Open

HOUSE OFFICERS' PERCEPTIONS OF PATIENT SAFETY AT THE DEFENCE SERVICES MEDICAL ACADEMY

Description

Background: Patient safety is a core component of medical education globally, yet evidence from low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) suggests persistent challenges in error reporting, disclosure, and systems-based understanding. Evaluating early-career doctors’ perceptions is essential to improving safety culture.

Objective: To assess house officers’ perceptions of patient safety across nine domains at the Defence Services Medical Academy (DSMA).

Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted among 42 house officers using the Attitudes to Patient Safety Questionnaire Version III (APSQ-III). Responses to 26 items across nine domains were analysed.

Results: Strongest positive attitudes appeared in team functioning (95%), patient involvement (89%), and training (77%). Lowest were disclosure responsibility (34%) and error reporting confidence (36%).

Conclusion: DSMA house officers demonstrate strong teamwork and safety knowledge but low error reporting and disclosure confidence.

Files

ISRGJAHSS1003412025.pdf

Files (704.7 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:e0a59ff7886a2fba485bcfedc06322b8
704.7 kB Preview Download