BackgroundRecognising how human factors shape workplace behaviour and patient safety, as well as appreciating their medicolegal consequences, is essential for the modern medical graduate.This study examines medical students' and resident doctors' practices, attitudes, and experiences in relation to patient safety and human factors. MethodsA national cross-sectional survey of UK medical students and resident doctors was done between April and June 2025.Results were compared with a pilot group of students from underrepresented backgrounds who participated in a tailored human factors and medico-legal workshop. ResultsOf 1,274 survey respondents, 942 (74.0%) were medical students and 332 (26.0%) were resident doctors.Human factors frequently reported were time pressures (57.0%), fatigue (56.2%) and ineffective handover (43.8%).Preparedness to manage human factors (mean 3.2/5) and confidence to speak up (mean 3.2/5) were significantly lower among comprehensive/state-educated respondents (confidence-adjusted odds ratio 0.70, 95% confidence interval 0.57-0.87,vs grammar/private/international schools).Most respondents lacked clear institutional guidance on the legal implications of error (62.2%), and nearly half did not know where to seek support.Workshop participants (n=21) reported higher preparedness to recognise and manage human factors and confidence raising concerns (p<0.001). ConclusionsDespite frequently encountering patient safety related human factors, UK resident doctors and medical students are only moderately prepared and supported to address them.In a healthcare environment with increasing workloads, resource limitations, and errors, greater training and exposure to key concepts is required.Educational interventions could be drawn from other high-reliability organisations such as aviation to reduce the incidence of patient safety and medical errors.
Mattey et al. (Sun,) studied this question.