| Literature DB >> 24959751 |
Liam J Donaldson1, Sukhmeet S Panesar2, Ara Darzi3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hospital mortality is increasingly being regarded as a key indicator of patient safety, yet methodologies for assessing mortality are frequently contested and seldom point directly to areas of risk and solutions. The aim of our study was to classify reports of deaths due to unsafe care into broad areas of systemic failure capable of being addressed by stronger policies, procedures, and practices. The deaths were reported to a patient safety incident reporting system after mandatory reporting of such incidents was introduced. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24959751 PMCID: PMC4068985 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001667
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Patient-safety-related adult deaths in NHS acute hospital settings: analysis of areas of systemic service failure.
| Area of Service Failure | Incident Type | Number of Incidents | Percent of Incidents |
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| Failure to act on or recognise deterioration | 462 | 23% |
| Failure to give ordered treatment/support in a timely way | 130 | 6% | |
| Failure to observe | 113 | 6% | |
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| Inpatient falls | 206 | 10% |
| Healthcare-associated infections | 202 | 10% | |
| Pressure sores/decubitus ulcers | 7 | <1% | |
| Suicides | 28 | 1% | |
| VTE/pulmonary embolus | 87 | 4% | |
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| Medication error | 60 | 3% |
| Misinterpretation or mishandling of test results | 34 | 2% | |
| Unexpected per-operative death (immediately/within 24 hours) | 124 | 6% | |
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| Inappropriate discharge | 78 | 4% |
| Poor/inadequate handover | 94 | 5% | |
| Unavailability of intensive treatment unit beds | 25 | 1% | |
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| Necessary equipment failed or faulty | 16 | <1% |
| Necessary equipment misused or misread by practitioner | 79 | 4% | |
| Necessary equipment not available | 22 | 1% | |
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Covers a 17-mo period from 1 June 2010 to 31 October 2012, during which reports of deaths were mandatory.
Extracts of free text from patient safety incident reports of death.
| Area of Service Failure | Extracts of Free Text from Patient Safety Incident Reports of Death |
| Mismanagement of deterioration | Presented to the emergency department at 1130 with abdominal pain, vomiting, confusion and a fall. Not triaged until 1215. At this point did not have a spot blood sugar check. Several hours later returned from having a chest X-ray that showed air under the diaphragm. Seen by surgeons. Observations appear not to have been repeated until 1950. Now has a blood sugar of 1.3 mmol/l and a blood pressure of 59/19 mm Hg. Referred to the intensive treatment unit. Intensive treatment unit concerned that the patient may have been shocked and hypoglycaemic for several hours before this was recognised. |
| Failure of prevention | Patient died from pulmonary embolus in hospital on day 12 of admission. On admission, VTE risk score was not performed which would have indicated that Fragmin [low molecular weight heparin] at a prophylactic dose should have been prescribed. |
| Deficient checking and oversight | Patient had chest X-ray and presented again, a year later, with a bronchial carcinoma and widespread disease and died five days later. Lung cancer judged to be present in the original chest X-ray and this was not included within the radiology report. The patient received no follow-up. |
| Dysfunctional patient flow | Sustained head and wrist injury whilst at garden centre. No loss of consciousness but had vomited once. Currently on warfarin. Glasgow Coma Scale = 15/15 on arrival in the emergency department. Seen by locum doctor; X-ray of the wrist did not reveal any fractures. No anticoagulation checks or request made for a CT scan. Discharged with minor head injury advice. Patient returned a day later with reduced consciousness and a CT scan revealed an intracranial bleed. |
| Equipment-related errors | Elderly patient with rheumatic heart disease who had a redo mitral valve repair. Decision made to replace Ryles nasogastric tube (for gastric drainage) with fine bore nasogastric tube. Chest X-ray reviewed by intensive treatment unit registrar and nasogastric tube deemed to be in correct position. Feeding commenced. Patient went into respiratory deterioration, was reintubated and ventilated. Nasogastric tube found to be in trachea and feeding stopped. |
| Other | Relatives informed that a body due for release for burial (Body A) was in fact that of another individual (Body B). Both bodies had been kept frozen for a long period of time and confusion over the correct body to be released had occurred. |