Literature DB >> 21500613

Underreporting of patient safety incidents reduces health care's ability to quantify and accurately measure harm reduction.

Douglas J Noble1, Peter J Pronovost.   

Abstract

Underreporting of patient safety incidents creates a reservoir of information that is plagued with epidemiological bias. These include systematic biases such as the practice of reporting minor incidents at the expense of more serious ones. This leads to inaccurate rates of errors and an inability to generalize results to whole patient populations. It leaves reporting incidents, in epidemiological terms, comparable to nonrandom samples from an unknown universe of events. These epidemiological problems lead to a situation where priorities are skewed toward what "we know we know." As "we know what we do not know," for example, gaps in knowledge about serious incidents due to low reporting rates, due caution must be applied in making policy based on biased underreporting. Barriers to reporting contribute to low participation rates and further bias information. Lack of feedback and fear of personal consequences are common barriers. Evaluation of reporting systems indicates reports can be used as tools for learning, but it is not yet possible to monitor improvement in patient safety or measurably prove reduction in harm. Mandatory reporting makes sense from an epidemiological point of view, but there are legitimate fears that it could further reduce reporting rates due to fear of reprisal. Underreporting and the associated biases are a significant problem in realizing the epidemiological potential of incident reporting in health care.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 21500613     DOI: 10.1097/pts.0b013e3181fd1697

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Patient Saf        ISSN: 1549-8417            Impact factor:   2.844


  28 in total

1.  Decisions and repercussions of second victim experiences for mothers in medicine (SAVE DR MoM).

Authors:  Kiran Gupta; Sarah Lisker; Natalie A Rivadeneira; Christina Mangurian; Eleni Linos; Urmimala Sarkar
Journal:  BMJ Qual Saf       Date:  2019-02-04       Impact factor: 7.035

2.  Investigation of medical error-reporting system and reporting status in Iran in 2019.

Authors:  Asaad Ranaei; Hasan Abolghasem Gorji; Aidin Aryankhesal; Mostafa Langarizadeh
Journal:  J Educ Health Promot       Date:  2020-10-30

3.  Advancing the Future of Patient Safety in Oncology: Implications of Patient Safety Education on Cancer Care Delivery.

Authors:  Ted A James; Michael Goedde; Tania Bertsch; Dennis Beatty
Journal:  J Cancer Educ       Date:  2016-09       Impact factor: 2.037

4.  Likelihood of reporting medication errors in hospitalized children: a survey of nurses and physicians.

Authors:  Rikke Mie Rishoej; Jesper Hallas; Lene Juel Kjeldsen; Henrik Thybo Christesen; Anna Birna Almarsdóttir
Journal:  Ther Adv Drug Saf       Date:  2017-12-22

5.  Fix and forget or fix and report: a qualitative study of tensions at the front line of incident reporting.

Authors:  Tanya Anne Hewitt; Samia Chreim
Journal:  BMJ Qual Saf       Date:  2015-03-06       Impact factor: 7.035

6.  What are incident reports telling us? A comparative study at two Australian hospitals of medication errors identified at audit, detected by staff and reported to an incident system.

Authors:  Johanna I Westbrook; Ling Li; Elin C Lehnbom; Melissa T Baysari; Jeffrey Braithwaite; Rosemary Burke; Chris Conn; Richard O Day
Journal:  Int J Qual Health Care       Date:  2015-01-12       Impact factor: 2.038

7.  Assessing adverse events among home care clients in three Canadian provinces using chart review.

Authors:  Régis Blais; Nancy A Sears; Diane Doran; G Ross Baker; Marilyn Macdonald; Lori Mitchell; Stéphane Thalès
Journal:  BMJ Qual Saf       Date:  2013-07-04       Impact factor: 7.035

8.  Phenotyping for patient safety: algorithm development for electronic health record based automated adverse event and medical error detection in neonatal intensive care.

Authors:  Qi Li; Kristin Melton; Todd Lingren; Eric S Kirkendall; Eric Hall; Haijun Zhai; Yizhao Ni; Megan Kaiser; Laura Stoutenborough; Imre Solti
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2014-01-08       Impact factor: 4.497

9.  The impact of a standardized incident reporting system in the perioperative setting: a single center experience on 2,563 'near-misses' and adverse events.

Authors:  Anita J Heideveld-Chevalking; Hiske Calsbeek; Johan Damen; Hein Gooszen; André P Wolff
Journal:  Patient Saf Surg       Date:  2014-12-10

10.  Sentinel events in ophthalmology: experience from Hong Kong.

Authors:  Shiu Ting Mak
Journal:  J Ophthalmol       Date:  2015-03-02       Impact factor: 1.909

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