Literature DB >> 16335062

Closing the loop: follow-up and feedback in a patient safety program.

Tejal K Gandhi1, Erin Graydon-Baker, Camilla Neppl Huber, Anthony D Whittemore, Michael Gustafson.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: As health care organizations establish patient safety agendas, attention has focused on creating less cumbersome systems for reporting errors. However, experience at Brigham and Women's Hospital (Boston) suggests that more emphasis needs to be placed on what happens after a report is submitted. FOLLOW-UP AND FEEDBACK: Follow-up includes prioritizing opportunities and actions, assigning responsibility and accountability, and implementing the action plan. Feedback entails (1) follow-up to those who report issues and (2) communication to the hospital staff and clinicians about events and actions taken. Responsibility and accountability for improvements need to be assigned by senior administration to hospital leaders who can effect the needed changes. Hospital leaders, not just the members of the patient safety team, must own these changes or improvements. Events that require follow-up action are brought to the attention of risk management and the patient safety team through several mechanisms, including voluntary reporting of adverse events through a computerized safety reporting system, root cause analyses, and Patient Safety Leadership WalkRounds. DISCUSSION: Developing and maintaining a systematic method for feedback represents more of a challenge than the completion of any single recommended action item. However, it is the feedback to the reporter that perpetuates the influx of information and closes the loop. Developing the information-tracking database has made providing feedback easier and more reliable but significant effort is required to keep the database current.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16335062     DOI: 10.1016/s1553-7250(05)31079-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf        ISSN: 1553-7250


  10 in total

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2.  Point-of-care testing: High time for a dedicated National Adverse Event Monitoring System.

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7.  Beyond Getting Rid of Stupid Stuff in the Electronic Health Record (Beyond-GROSS): Protocol for a User-Centered, Mixed-Method Intervention to Improve the Electronic Health Record System.

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Review 9.  Improving the governance of patient safety in emergency care: a systematic review of interventions.

Authors:  Gijs Hesselink; Sivera Berben; Thimpe Beune; Lisette Schoonhoven
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  10 in total

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