| Literature DB >> 27530239 |
Hardeep Singh1, Gordon D Schiff2, Mark L Graber3,4, Igho Onakpoya5, Matthew J Thompson6.
Abstract
Diagnosis is one of the most important tasks performed by primary care physicians. The World Health Organization (WHO) recently prioritized patient safety areas in primary care, and included diagnostic errors as a high-priority problem. In addition, a recent report from the Institute of Medicine in the USA, 'Improving Diagnosis in Health Care', concluded that most people will likely experience a diagnostic error in their lifetime. In this narrative review, we discuss the global significance, burden and contributory factors related to diagnostic errors in primary care. We synthesize available literature to discuss the types of presenting symptoms and conditions most commonly affected. We then summarize interventions based on available data and suggest next steps to reduce the global burden of diagnostic errors. Research suggests that we are unlikely to find a 'magic bullet' and confirms the need for a multifaceted approach to understand and address the many systems and cognitive issues involved in diagnostic error. Because errors involve many common conditions and are prevalent across all countries, the WHO's leadership at a global level will be instrumental to address the problem. Based on our review, we recommend that the WHO consider bringing together primary care leaders, practicing frontline clinicians, safety experts, policymakers, the health IT community, medical education and accreditation organizations, researchers from multiple disciplines, patient advocates, and funding bodies among others, to address the many common challenges and opportunities to reduce diagnostic error. This could lead to prioritization of practice changes needed to improve primary care as well as setting research priorities for intervention development to reduce diagnostic error. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnostic errors; Health policy; Information technology; Patient safety; Primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27530239 PMCID: PMC5502242 DOI: 10.1136/bmjqs-2016-005401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Qual Saf ISSN: 2044-5415 Impact factor: 7.035
Figure 1Relationships between diagnostic errors, missed opportunities and patient harm (adapted from Singh H).18
Factors that predispose to diagnostic errors in primary care settings
| Factors | Ideal circumstances | Problems contributing to error |
|---|---|---|
| Access to high-quality primary care | Universal access without significant geographic, financial barriers | Limited access due to lack of money, remoteness, illiteracy, travel constraints or limited number of healthcare facilities |
| Availability of healthcare professionals | Sufficient range and number of healthcare professionals who contribute to the primary care team | Lack of sufficient healthcare professionals perhaps due to lack of training, outward migration or poor employment situation |
| Access to specialists | Specialists immediately available in person (or remotely through telemedicine) for expert assessment | Specialty expertise may not exist, or may be limited in number or quality |
| Diagnostic tests | Full range of appropriate diagnostic modalities (eg, imaging, laboratory tests) available when needed/appropriate | Diagnostic tests limited in scope, availability or quality as well as failure to interpret tests correctly |
| Communication | Patients and providers communicate efficiently; consultation and test results exchanged reliably and in timely fashion | Little or no sharing of medical information |
| Care coordination | Coordinated care facilitates available; accurate and efficient evaluation | Consultations are delayed; test results are lost, lack of health records to document care |
| Follow-up | Diagnosis enhanced by being able to follow symptom evolution; diagnostic errors are detected and errors ameliorated | Limited follow-up and discontinuities degrade the ability for diagnostic impressions to evolve |
| Affordability of care | All needed care is affordable and/or covered by insurance | Care unaffordable, or compromises other basic needs such as food or housing |
| Training of healthcare professionals | Physicians, nurses and all professional staff are well trained. Certification and licensure requirements ensure competency | Training is sub-optimal. Certification and licensure requirements are deficient |
| Availability of health informatics resources | Mature health informatics resources exist to support clinical care and decision-making | Health informatics resources including internet access not available especially in remote areas. Unaffordable subscription or download fees for medical information |
| Culture | Culture of safety exists; climate where clinicians not afraid to share and learn from mistakes. Patient-empowerment promoted, patients are partners in care | Traditional cultures often punitive, which discourages sharing and inhibits learning. Patients more passive care recipients |
At-risk categories of harmful diagnostic errors
| High-risk area | Disease | Additional considerations |
|---|---|---|
| Infections | Viral infections | Often misdiagnosed as bacterial and result in unnecessary antibiotics |
| Pneumonia, dehydration from diarrhoea and malaria | Diagnoses of children often suboptimal, particularly with less well-trained healthcare workers | |
| Malaria | Key presenting features (eg, fever) not specific | |
| Tuberculosis | Lack of careful use of basic diagnostics result in almost 10% being misdiagnosed. | |
| Cardiovascular disease | Myocardial infarction, stroke | Ranks high in malpractice claims |
| Cancer | Several cancer types | Alarm symptoms often poorly predictive, |
| Paediatrics | Claims study | Misdiagnoses may contribute to the nearly 7 million children who die each year, largely from preventable causes |
| Meningococcal disease | Half of children misdiagnosed at the first physician contact largely because presenting symptoms were non-specific | |
| Viral illnesses diagnosed as bacterial, medication side effects, appendicitis and psychiatric disorders | More than half of surveyed paediatricians reported making a diagnostic error at least once or twice a month, and harmful errors at least once or twice a year | |
| Hypertension, problems with referrals and follow-up of abnormal laboratory values | Primary care paediatricians who were surveyed expressed high interest in trying to improve common sub-critical errors vs errors in less common acute situations |
Figure 2Potential interventions to reduce global burden of diagnostic errors. IT, information technology; POCT, point-of-care testing.