Patient safety is the main point to consider and promote in every health service at various levels of health facilities. It is highly prominent for students, especially clinical clerkships, as future doctors. Currently, the use of educational video is a popular learning medium for students. Yet, no research reveals how clinical clerkships are exposed to patient safety after learning through videos before taking education at teaching hospitals. The current study aimed to describe the learning outcomes of patient safety education videos in clinical clerkships. It employed a descriptive-analytic method. Twenty-three clinical clerkships studied the videos about patient safety and filled out questions associated with patient safety. The average score of the learning outcomes of the patient safety videos was 84.64. The scores ranged from 60 to 100, and the median was 86.66. The answers with the lowest scores were questions about patient safety goals and the accuracy of patient identification. The aspects of knowledge about drug allergy, hand hygiene, reduction in inpatient fall, and identification of blood transfusions were answered correctly by all participants. The outcomes of the clinical clerkship learning are still varied. Further research is required to compare learning outcomes before and after studying educational videos with a broader domain.