Literature DB >> 20962128

An analysis of computer-related patient safety incidents to inform the development of a classification.

Farah Magrabi1, Mei-Sing Ong, William Runciman, Enrico Coiera.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To analyze patient safety incidents associated with computer use to develop the basis for a classification of problems reported by health professionals.
DESIGN: Incidents submitted to a voluntary incident reporting database across one Australian state were retrieved and a subset (25%) was analyzed to identify 'natural categories' for classification. Two coders independently classified the remaining incidents into one or more categories. Free text descriptions were analyzed to identify contributing factors. Where available medical specialty, time of day and consequences were examined. MEASUREMENTS: Descriptive statistics; inter-rater reliability.
RESULTS: A search of 42,616 incidents from 2003 to 2005 yielded 123 computer related incidents. After removing duplicate and unrelated incidents, 99 incidents describing 117 problems remained. A classification with 32 types of computer use problems was developed. Problems were grouped into information input (31%), transfer (20%), output (20%) and general technical (24%). Overall, 55% of problems were machine related and 45% were attributed to human-computer interaction. Delays in initiating and completing clinical tasks were a major consequence of machine related problems (70%) whereas rework was a major consequence of human-computer interaction problems (78%). While 38% (n=26) of the incidents were reported to have a noticeable consequence but no harm, 34% (n=23) had no noticeable consequence.
CONCLUSION: Only 0.2% of all incidents reported were computer related. Further work is required to expand our classification using incident reports and other sources of information about healthcare IT problems. Evidence based user interface design must focus on the safe entry and retrieval of clinical information and support users in detecting and correcting errors and malfunctions.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20962128      PMCID: PMC3000751          DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2009.002444

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc        ISSN: 1067-5027            Impact factor:   4.497


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2.  Some unintended consequences of information technology in health care: the nature of patient care information system-related errors.

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Review 4.  Usability Flaws in Medication Alerting Systems: Impact on Usage and Work System.

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5.  Building Usability Knowledge for Health Information Technology: A Usability-Oriented Analysis of Incident Reports.

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6.  Electronic Health Records and Improved Patient Care: Opportunities for Applied Psychology.

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7.  The Unintended Consequences of Health Information Technology Revisited.

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8.  Initializing and Growing a Database of Health Information Technology (HIT) Events by Using TF-IDF and Biterm Topic Modeling.

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9.  Syndromic surveillance for health information system failures: a feasibility study.

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10.  Learning from incident reports in the Australian medical imaging setting: handover and communication errors.

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