Literature DB >> 19204125

Trends in healthcare incident reporting and relationship to safety and quality data in acute hospitals: results from the National Reporting and Learning System.

A Hutchinson1, T A Young, K L Cooper, A McIntosh, J D Karnon, S Scobie, R G Thomson.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Internationally, there is increasing recognition of the need to collect and analyse data on patient safety incidents, to facilitate learning and develop solutions. The National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA) for England and Wales has been capturing incident data from acute hospitals since November 2003.
OBJECTIVES: This study analyses patterns in reporting of patient safety incidents from all acute hospitals in England to the NPSA National Reporting and Learning System, and explores the link between reporting rates, hospital characteristics, and other safety and quality datasets.
METHODS: Reporting rates to the NPSA National Reporting and Learning System were analysed as trends over time, from the point at which each hospital became connected to the system. The relationships between reporting rates and other safety and quality datasets were assessed using correlation and regression analyses.
RESULTS: Reporting rates increased steadily over the 18 months analysed. Higher reporting rates correlated with positive data on safety culture and incident reporting from the NHS Staff Survey, and with better risk-management ratings from the NHS Litigation Authority. Hospitals with higher overall reporting rates had a lower proportion of their reports in the "slips, trips and falls" category, suggesting that these hospitals were reporting higher numbers of other types of incident. There was no apparent association between reporting rates and the following data: standardised mortality ratios, data from other safety-related reporting systems, hospital size, average patient age or length of stay.
CONCLUSIONS: Incident reporting rates from acute hospitals increase with time from connection to the national reporting system, and are positively correlated with independently defined measures of safety culture, higher reporting rates being associated with a more positive safety culture.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19204125     DOI: 10.1136/qshc.2007.022400

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Qual Saf Health Care        ISSN: 1475-3898


  38 in total

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8.  Evaluating resampling methods and structured features to improve fall incident report identification by the severity level.

Authors:  Jiaxing Liu; Zoie S Y Wong; H Y So; Kwok Leung Tsui
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9.  Relationship between preventable hospital deaths and other measures of safety: an exploratory study.

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10.  Quality management and safety culture in medicine - Do standard quality reports provide insights into the human factor of patient safety?

Authors:  Werner Wischet; Claudia Schusterschitz
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