| Literature DB >> 29788906 |
Ian Litchfield1, Paramjit Gill2, Tony Avery3, Stephen Campbell4, Katherine Perryman4, Kate Marsden3, Sheila Greenfield5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Primary care is changing rapidly to meet the needs of an ageing and chronically ill population. New ways of working are called for yet the introduction of innovative service interventions is complicated by organisational challenges arising from its scale and diversity and the growing complexity of patients and their care. One such intervention is the multi-strand, single platform, Patient Safety Toolkit developed to help practices provide safer care in this dynamic and pressured environment where the likelihood of adverse incidents is increasing. Here we describe the attitudes of staff toward these tools and how their implementation was shaped by a number of contextual factors specific to each practice.Entities:
Keywords: General practice; Health services research; Patient safety; Primary care; Quality improvement
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29788906 PMCID: PMC5964721 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-018-0761-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Description of patient safety tool kit
| Name of tool | Description | Methodology | Participants | Estimated time to completion | Regions participating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trigger Tool [ | A system of rapid retrospective note review to allow clinicians to detect episodes of harm and patterns of error which might be occurring undetected in their practices. | Sample created of 25 random patients over the age of 75 to screen for any harm or patient safety incident. The Trigger Tool provides a framework for the case review that highlights any incidents of harm or near misses. | Single or multiple GPs or GP registrars | 90 min | All |
| PC-SafeQuest [ | An online tool which is intended to be completed by all members of the practice team allowing for a quantitative assessment of the perceived climate of safety within a practice. | Staff are invited to complete an anonymised survey on line. Once completed by a sufficient number of staff, a report can be generated summarising the findings. These are presented as a score in one of four domains, (i) workload; (ii) communication; (iii) leadership; (iv) teamwork; and (v) safety systems. These scores are then used to facilitate discussions around any issues that emerged. | All practice staff. Participation is voluntary. | 10–15 min per individual. | West Midlands |
| Patient Reported Experiences and Outcomes of Safety in Primary Care (PREOS-PC) [ | A questionnaire to gather the experience of patients with respect to patient safety in general practice, and on patient reported safety outcomes. Questions are asked within five areas; practice activation; patient activation; experiences of patient safety events; harm; and general perceptions of patient safety. | Practice supplied with 150 envelopes containing the questionnaire, instructions for patients and a reply paid envelope. The practice will then produces the list of recipients and post the questionnaire. | A sample of 150 patients over the age of 18 generated by the practice. A GP is expected to check that this does not include vulnerable patients. | 60 min | All |
| Prescribing Safety Indicators [ | Indicators involve the use of CHART (Care and Health Analysis in Real Time) software to extract data on patients at risk of medication-related injury. There are 36 in total and include prescribing related to issues such as cardiovascular and respiratory disease, immunosuppression and laboratory test monitoring. | Install CHART software, download the prescribing safety indicators from PRIMIS Hub, run the computer queries on the GP clinical system and uploading the results to CHART online. The resultant data identifies at-risk patients for the practice who then upload an anonymised version to CHART online, aggregated and shared so practices can view their results in relation to other practices. | Various (including member of study team) | 60 min | West Midlands |
| Medicines Reconciliation Tool [ | Used to assess the quality of medications reconciliation process on discharge with a focus on vulnerable patients. | Staff populate a data collection form using the discharge document, the consultation record and the medication record of 20 patients aged 65 and over discharged from emergency hospital between 3 and 6 months ago. This data helps to assess how promptly and how accurately medication changes suggested by the hospital have been made. It also assesses the extent to which changes have been discussed with patients. | Senior staff member collecting data from records | 100 min | East Midlands |
| Concise Safe Systems Checklist for General Practice [ | A checklist covering aspects of patient safety not covered by existing tools or legislation. Specifically relates to background systems in practices such as items relating to repeat prescriptions and logs of details of minor operations. | Completion of the checklist form by a practice manager or a senior clinician and used annually. | Senior staff member | 30 min | North Staffordshire |
Fig. 1The Topic Guide
Average characteristics of study practices
| List Sizea | Under 18a | 65 + a | % Non-Whiteb | Deprivation Scorea | QOF Score (2013)a | % Femaleb | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study practice Average/SDc | 8824 | 20.4% | 15.5% | 17.7% | 21.8 | 976.7 | 51.1% |
| English | 7041a | 20.8%a | 16.7%a | 13%b | 21.5a | 961a | 51%b |
ataken from National General Practice Profiles (Public Health England) [31]
btaken from the GP Patient Survey July 2014 [32]
cThe practice average and standard deviation use values that are weighted by the practice list size but the median and interquartile range use values that are not weighted by the list size
Job role of those interviewed at each practice
| East Midlands (EM) | Greater Manchester (GM) | South Coast (SC) | North Staffordshire (NM) | West Midlands (WM) | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GP | 8 | 4a | 5 | 3 | 1b | 21 |
| PM | 1 | 2 | – | 4 | 8 | 15 |
| Practice Nurse | – | – | – | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| HCA | – | – | – | 1 | – | 1 |
| Total number of interviews | 9 | 6 | 5 | 9 | 10 | 39 |
aincluding one GP Registrar
bInterviewed alongside Practice Manager
Summary of themes and sub-themes in relation to individual tools
| Theme | Sub-theme 1 | Sub-theme 2 | Trigger tool | PC-Safe-Quest | PREOS-PC | Prescribing Safety Indicators | Medicines Reconciliation Tool | Concise Safe Systems Checklist for General Practice |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Tool Design | 1.1 Utility | Inform patient safety | Did not uncover enough learning points for those using SEA. | Provided a useful practice-wide staff perspective. | Provided a novel patient perspective. | Produced useful patient specific information. | Produced useful information. | Produced useful information that prompted reflection on safety issues. |
| 1.2 Usability | Format | Was time consuming in the selection of individual records. | Completed online and easy to follow. | Resource intensive due to the addressing and packing of multiple envelopes. | Required either existing IT knowledge or additional help and support. | Straightforward to use. | Easy to use and quick to complete | |
| 2. Organisational factors | 2.1 Staff training | Existing skill set | Was straightforward to use though a preference for an electronic version was expressed. | No training needed though an email address for each staff member was required. | Issues arose selecting random patients and using ‘mail merge’ to address letters and envelopes. | Staff training was required to run the software and upload the results. | No formal training required. An electronic version preferred. | No training required |
| 2.2 Available resource | Staffing levels, | |||||||
| 2.3 Existing patient safety approaches | Comparative effectiveness | |||||||
| 3. Environmental context | 3.1 Clinical commissioning group | Existing initiatives | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Repeated the work of a CCG initiative in one area. | N/A |
| 3.2 Central policy | Financial Incentives |