■ Physician-team:

Leveraging the power of collaboration to foster safe care

Psychological safety

Making it safe to speak up and reduce risks

Hands shielding wooden human figures on a table.
Published: April 2021
7 minutes

Introduction

The provision of reliable safe medical care requires, as a foundation, a psychologically safe environment in which healthcare teams can operate. Psychological safety is a shared belief that anyone on the care team can speak up and share their opinion respectfully without fear of retribution. 1 In a psychologically safe environment, all individuals feel safe to:

  • ask questions without fear of being labelled ignorant
  • ask for feedback without fear of being considered incompetent
  • be respectfully critical of a plan without fear of being regarded as disruptive
  • offer suggestions for improvement without being branded as negative

Psychological safety empowers core team behaviours like speaking up and cross-monitoring, as well as processes such as huddles, briefings, debriefings, and handovers. Ultimately, all of these processes and behaviours help foster the creation and maintenance of situational awareness, which is a key driver of safe care and clinical excellence.

Safe medical care

Situational awareness

Gathering information - Understanding - Thinking ahead

Effective team communication

  • Surgical Safety Checklist
  • Healthy conflict
  • Huddles
  • Speaking up
  • Briefings
  • Debriefings
  • Handovers
  • Delegation and supervision

Psychological safety


Within a psychologically safe culture, team members are able to focus on collective team goals and prevent problems, instead of focusing on self-protection. One of the defining qualities of team psychological safety is that team relationships are characterized by respect and trust.

Good practice guidance

Checklist: Building a culture of psychological safety

One of the strongest predictors of clinical excellence is a psychologically safe culture that encourages speaking up 


References

  1. Edmondson A. Psychological Safety and Learning Behavior in Work Teams. Adm Sci Q. 1999 Jun;44(2):350-383. doi: https://doi.org/10.2307/2666999
  2. Okuyama A, Wagner C, Bijnen B. Speaking up for patient safety by hospital-based health care professionals: a literature review. BMC Health Serv Res. 2014;14: 61-8. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-14-61
  3. Dunn EJ, Mills PD, Neily J, et al. Medical team training: applying crew resource management in the Veterans Health Administration. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2007 Jun;33(6):317-25. doi: 10.1016/s1553-7250(07)33036-5
CanMEDS: Collaborator, Professional

DISCLAIMER: This content is for general informational purposes and is not intended to provide specific professional medical or legal advice, nor to constitute a "standard of care" for Canadian healthcare professionals. Your use of CMPA learning resources is subject to the foregoing as well as CMPA's Terms of Use.