Literature DB >> 11079216

A comparison of iatrogenic injury studies in Australia and the USA. I: Context, methods, casemix, population, patient and hospital characteristics.

E J Thomas1, D M Studdert, W B Runciman, R K Webb, E J Sexton, R M Wilson, R W Gibberd, B T Harrison, T A Brennan.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To better understand the differences between two iatrogenic injury studies of hospitalized patients in 1992 which used ostensibly similar methods and similar sample sizes, but had quite different findings. The Quality in Australian Health Care Study (QAHCS) reported that 16.6% of admissions were associated with adverse events (AE), whereas the Utah, Colorado Study (UTCOS) reported a rate of 2.9%.
SETTING: Hospitalized patients in Australia and the USA.
DESIGN: Investigators from both studies compared methods and characteristics and identified differences. QAHCS data were then analysed using UTCOS methods. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Differences between the studies and the comparative AE rates when these had been accounted for.
RESULTS: Both studies used a two-stage chart review process (screening nurse review followed by confirmatory physician review) to detect AEs; five important methodological differences were found: (i) QAHCS nurse reviewers referred records that documented any link to a previous admission, whereas UTCOS imposed age-related time constraints; (ii) QAHCS used a lower confidence threshold for defining medical causation; (iii) QAHCS used two physician reviewers, whereas UTCOS used one; (iv) QAHCS counted all AEs associated with an index admission whereas UTCOS counted only those determining the annual incidence; and (v) QAHCS included some types of events not included in UTCOS. When the QAHCS data were analysed using UTCOS methods, the comparative rates became 10.6% and 3.2%, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: Five methodological differences accounted for some of the discrepancy between the two studies. Two explanations for the remaining three-fold disparity are that quality of care was worse in Australia and that medical record content and/or reviewer behaviour was different.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 11079216     DOI: 10.1093/intqhc/12.5.371

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Qual Health Care        ISSN: 1353-4505            Impact factor:   2.038


  22 in total

1.  Attitudes to reporting medication error among differing healthcare professionals.

Authors:  Ajit Sarvadikar; Gordon Prescott; David Williams
Journal:  Eur J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2010-06-08       Impact factor: 2.953

2.  What can hospitalized patients tell us about adverse events? Learning from patient-reported incidents.

Authors:  Saul N Weingart; Odelya Pagovich; Daniel Z Sands; Joseph M Li; Mark D Aronson; Roger B Davis; David W Bates; Russell S Phillips
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2005-09       Impact factor: 5.128

3.  Improving patient safety: moving beyond the "hype" of medical errors.

Authors:  Alan J Forster; Kaveh G Shojania; Carl van Walraven
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2005-10-11       Impact factor: 8.262

4.  Errors and adverse events in family medicine: developing and validating a Canadian taxonomy of errors.

Authors:  Sarah Jacobs; Maeve O'Beirne; Luz Palacios Derfiingher; Lucie Vlach; Walter Rosser; Neil Drummond
Journal:  Can Fam Physician       Date:  2007-02       Impact factor: 3.275

Review 5.  Role of the surgeon in quality and safety in the operating room environment.

Authors:  Robert R Cima; Claude Deschamps
Journal:  Gen Thorac Cardiovasc Surg       Date:  2012-07-19

6.  Incidence and preventability of adverse events in an orthopaedic unit: a prospective analysis of four thousand, nine hundred and six admissions.

Authors:  Shanmuganathan Rajasekaran; Srikesh Ravi; Siddharth N Aiyer
Journal:  Int Orthop       Date:  2016-09-01       Impact factor: 3.075

Review 7.  An integrated framework for safety, quality and risk management: an information and incident management system based on a universal patient safety classification.

Authors:  W B Runciman; J A H Williamson; A Deakin; K A Benveniste; K Bannon; P D Hibbert
Journal:  Qual Saf Health Care       Date:  2006-12

8.  A string of mistakes: the importance of cascade analysis in describing, counting, and preventing medical errors.

Authors:  Steven H Woolf; Anton J Kuzel; Susan M Dovey; Robert L Phillips
Journal:  Ann Fam Med       Date:  2004 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 5.166

9.  Development of an orthopedic surgery trauma patient handover checklist.

Authors:  Justin LeBlanc; Tyrone Donnon; Carol Hutchison; Paul Duffy
Journal:  Can J Surg       Date:  2014-02       Impact factor: 2.089

10.  Ottawa Hospital Patient Safety Study: incidence and timing of adverse events in patients admitted to a Canadian teaching hospital.

Authors:  Alan J Forster; Tim R Asmis; Heather D Clark; Ghiath Al Saied; Catherine C Code; Sharon C Caughey; Kevin Baker; James Watters; Jim Worthington; Carl van Walraven
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2004-04-13       Impact factor: 8.262

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.