| Literature DB >> 24586591 |
Friederike Holderried1, Daniel Heine2, Robert Wagner3, Moritz Mahling4, Yelena Fenik4, Anne Herrmann-Werner5, Reimer Riessen6, Peter Weyrich3, Stephan Zipfel5, Nora Celebi7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient chart review is the gold standard for detection of potential patient hazards (i.e. medication errors or failure to follow up actionable results) in both routine clinical care and patient safety research. However, advanced medical students' ability to read patient charts and to identify patient hazards is rather poor. We therefore investigated whether it is possible to teach advanced medical students how to identify patient hazards independent of context (i.e. cancer versus cardiac failure) in patient charts.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24586591 PMCID: PMC3930714 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0089198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Study design.
R = Randomization of 123 5th year medical students, O = Observation (review of a fictional patient chart with twelve common patient hazards), X = Intervention (training on patient chart review and patient safety), C = Control-Intervention (ultrasound and Skills lab-training).
Example of a case vignette with twelve common patient hazards.
| Scenario | Cellulitis in patient with a renal graft, penicillin allergy |
| Drug missing | Thromboembolic prophylaxis |
| Not-indicated medication | Penicillin |
| Medication with wrong dosage | Immunosuppression 10-fold overdosed |
| contraindication against a drug | Penicillin allergy |
| Side effect of the medication | Steroid diabetes |
| Risk situation for non-authorized medication | Pain killer |
| Incidental finding | Atypical naevus |
| Missing diagnostic test for the main problem | Blood culture |
| Missing monitoring | Tacrolimus-level |
| Infectious complication | Not used central line catheter |
| Wrong Diet/fluid management | Exsiccosis |
| Incomplete Documentation | Anemia |
Characteristics of the study participants.
| IC | CI | |
| Age | 26±3 years | 26±3 years |
| Gender | 13 male, 30 female | 23 male, 22 female |
| Previous education | 2 nurse/paramedic, 5 aide on the ward, 36 none | 4 nurse/paramedic, 5 aide on the ward, 36 none |
| Previously performed patient chart reviews | 40 never, 3 1–5 times | 40 never, 3 1–5 times, 2>5 times |
| N | 43 | 45 |
Figure 2Patient hazards identified during patient chart review.
IC: intervention – control-group (first patient chart review-training, then control-intervention), CI: control – intervention-group (first control-intervention, then patient chart review-training). O1–3: observations, review of a standardized fictional patient chart with twelve common patient hazards. A star indicates a significant difference (all p<.01).