Literature DB >> 28241211

Families as Partners in Hospital Error and Adverse Event Surveillance.

Alisa Khan1,2, Maitreya Coffey3, Katherine P Litterer4, Jennifer D Baird5, Stephannie L Furtak1, Briana M Garcia1, Michele A Ashland6, Sharon Calaman7, Nicholas C Kuzma8, Jennifer K O'Toole9, Aarti Patel9, Glenn Rosenbluth10, Lauren A Destino11, Jennifer L Everhart11, Brian P Good12, Jennifer H Hepps13, Anuj K Dalal14,15, Stuart R Lipsitz14,15, Catherine S Yoon15, Katherine R Zigmont15, Rajendu Srivastava12,16, Amy J Starmer1,2, Theodore C Sectish1,2, Nancy D Spector17, Daniel C West10, Christopher P Landrigan1,2,18, Brenda K Allair19, Claire Alminde20, Wilma Alvarado-Little21, Marisa Atsatt22, Megan E Aylor23, James F Bale24, Dorene Balmer25, Kevin T Barton26, Carolyn Beck27, Zia Bismilla27, Rebecca L Blankenburg28, Debra Chandler29, Amanda Choudhary30, Eileen Christensen30, Sally Coghlan-McDonald31, F Sessions Cole26, Elizabeth Corless30, Sharon Cray20, Roxi Da Silva32, Devesh Dahale29, Benard Dreyer33, Amanda S Growdon34, LeAnn Gubler30, Amy Guiot35, Roben Harris36, Helen Haskell37, Irene Kocolas24, Elizabeth Kruvand36, Michele Marie Lane36, Kathleen Langrish27, Christy J W Ledford38, Kheyandra Lewis39, Joseph O Lopreiato38, Christopher G Maloney24, Amanda Mangan31, Peggy Markle32, Fernando Mendoza28, Dale Ann Micalizzi40, Vineeta Mittal41, Maria Obermeyer29, Katherine A O'Donnell34, Mary Ottolini42, Shilpa J Patel43, Rita Pickler44, Jayne Elizabeth Rogers19, Lee M Sanders28, Kimberly Sauder36, Samir S Shah35, Meesha Sharma19, Arabella Simpkin45, Anupama Subramony46, E Douglas Thompson39, Laura Trueman29, Tanner Trujillo30, Michael P Turmelle26, Cindy Warnick30, Chelsea Welch30, Andrew J White26, Matthew F Wien47, Ariel S Winn34, Stephanie Wintch22, Michael Wolf48, H Shonna Yin33, Clifton E Yu38.   

Abstract

Importance: Medical errors and adverse events (AEs) are common among hospitalized children. While clinician reports are the foundation of operational hospital safety surveillance and a key component of multifaceted research surveillance, patient and family reports are not routinely gathered. We hypothesized that a novel family-reporting mechanism would improve incident detection. Objective: To compare error and AE rates (1) gathered systematically with vs without family reporting, (2) reported by families vs clinicians, and (3) reported by families vs hospital incident reports. Design, Setting, and Participants: We conducted a prospective cohort study including the parents/caregivers of 989 hospitalized patients 17 years and younger (total 3902 patient-days) and their clinicians from December 2014 to July 2015 in 4 US pediatric centers. Clinician abstractors identified potential errors and AEs by reviewing medical records, hospital incident reports, and clinician reports as well as weekly and discharge Family Safety Interviews (FSIs). Two physicians reviewed and independently categorized all incidents, rating severity and preventability (agreement, 68%-90%; κ, 0.50-0.68). Discordant categorizations were reconciled. Rates were generated using Poisson regression estimated via generalized estimating equations to account for repeated measures on the same patient. Main Outcomes and Measures: Error and AE rates.
Results: Overall, 746 parents/caregivers consented for the study. Of these, 717 completed FSIs. Their median (interquartile range) age was 32.5 (26-40) years; 380 (53.0%) were nonwhite, 566 (78.9%) were female, 603 (84.1%) were English speaking, and 380 (53.0%) had attended college. Of 717 parents/caregivers completing FSIs, 185 (25.8%) reported a total of 255 incidents, which were classified as 132 safety concerns (51.8%), 102 nonsafety-related quality concerns (40.0%), and 21 other concerns (8.2%). These included 22 preventable AEs (8.6%), 17 nonharmful medical errors (6.7%), and 11 nonpreventable AEs (4.3%) on the study unit. In total, 179 errors and 113 AEs were identified from all sources. Family reports included 8 otherwise unidentified AEs, including 7 preventable AEs. Error rates with family reporting (45.9 per 1000 patient-days) were 1.2-fold (95% CI, 1.1-1.2) higher than rates without family reporting (39.7 per 1000 patient-days). Adverse event rates with family reporting (28.7 per 1000 patient-days) were 1.1-fold (95% CI, 1.0-1.2; P = .006) higher than rates without (26.1 per 1000 patient-days). Families and clinicians reported similar rates of errors (10.0 vs 12.8 per 1000 patient-days; relative rate, 0.8; 95% CI, .5-1.2) and AEs (8.5 vs 6.2 per 1000 patient-days; relative rate, 1.4; 95% CI, 0.8-2.2). Family-reported error rates were 5.0-fold (95% CI, 1.9-13.0) higher and AE rates 2.9-fold (95% CI, 1.2-6.7) higher than hospital incident report rates. Conclusions and Relevance: Families provide unique information about hospital safety and should be included in hospital safety surveillance in order to facilitate better design and assessment of interventions to improve safety.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28241211      PMCID: PMC5526631          DOI: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2016.4812

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA Pediatr        ISSN: 2168-6203            Impact factor:   16.193


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