- Harris, Cynthia K;
- Chen, Yigu;
- Alston, Erin L;
- Brown, Ali;
- Chabot-Richards, Devon;
- Dintzis, Suzanne M;
- Graber, Mark L;
- Jackups, Ronald;
- Lomo, Lesley C;
- Laudadio, Jennifer;
- Markwood, Priscilla S;
- Nielson, Kaitlyn J;
- Samedi, Von;
- Sampson, Barbara;
- Haspel, Richard L;
- Zafar, Nadeem;
- Montone, Kathleen T;
- Childs, John;
- White, Kristie L;
- Heher, Yael K
Patient safety education is a mandated Common Program Requirement of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and for the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada in all medical residency and fellowship programs. Although many hospitals and healthcare environments have general patient safety education tools for trainees, few to none focus on the unique training milieu of pathologists, including a mix of highly automated and manual error-prone processes, frequent multiplicity of events, and lack of direct patient relationships for error disclosure. We established a national Association of Pathology Chairs-Program Directors Section Workgroup focused on patient safety education for pathology trainees entitled Training Residents in Patient Safety (TRIPS). TRIPS included diverse representatives from across the United States, as well as representatives from pathology organizations including the American Board of Pathology, the American Society for Clinical Pathology, the United States and Canadian Academy of Pathology, the College of American Pathologists, and the Society to Improve Diagnosis in Medicine. Objectives of the workgroup included developing a standardized patient safety curriculum, designing teaching and assessment tools, and refining them with pilot sites. Here we report the establishment of TRIPS as well as data from national needs assessment of Program Directors across the country, who confirmed the need for a standardized patient safety curriculum.