| Literature DB >> 29973258 |
René Schwendimann1,2, Catherine Blatter3, Suzanne Dhaini3,4, Michael Simon3,5, Dietmar Ausserhofer3,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adverse events (AEs) seriously affect patient safety and quality of care, and remain a pressing global issue. This study had three objectives: (1) to describe the proportions of patients affected by in-hospital AEs; (2) to explore the types and consequences of observed AEs; and (3) to estimate the preventability of in-hospital AEs.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse events; Hospitals; Medical error; Patient safety; Scoping review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29973258 PMCID: PMC6032777 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3335-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Brief overview on the characteristics and differences between the ‘Harvard method’ and the ‘Global Trigger Tool method’ to detect AEs through retrospective medical record review based on Unbeck et al. [8]
| Characteristics | Harvard method | Global Trigger Tool |
|---|---|---|
| Definition of AE | “An unintended injury or complication that results in disability at discharge, death or prolonged hospital stay and is caused by healthcare management rather than the patient’s underlying disease.” | “Unintended injury resulting from or contributed to by medical care that requires additional monitoring, treatment or hospitalization, or that results in death.” |
| Focus | Omission and commission | Commission, excludes omission |
| Method | Two - three stage retrospective record review | Two stage retrospective record review |
| Review Stage 1 | One healthcare professional (most often nurse) | Two independent reviewers per record (e.g. nurse, physician) |
| Review Stage 2 | Two independent reviews (most often physicians) | A team discuss the findings together Physician as arbitrator |
| Criterion/Trigger | - Comprehensive reading of record | - No comprehensive reading |
| Number of records / Time | Random, large samples | Random, small samples (e.g. 10 records every second week or 20 records every month per hospital) |
Fig. 1Flow diagram of article retrieval
Frequencies of occurrence, characteristics/types, consequences and preventability reported in the included studies on in-hospital AEs
| Authors (publication year), Country | Hospital/ Setting/ Sample size | Occurrence of AEs | Characteristics/Types of AEs | Consequences of AEs | Preventable AEs |
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| Akbari et al. (2015), Iran, [ | 4 general hospitals; medicine, general surgery, urology, orthopaedics, ICU, CCU, A&E, ENT, ophthalmology, paediatrics and women’s health ( | 7.3% during stay (3.7% of patients had AEs before admission) | Adverse drug reaction (26.6%); post-op infections (19.5%); pressure ulcers (13.3%); hospital-acquired infections (10.2%); procedural complications (10.2%) | Minimal impairment (< 1 month): 73.4%; moderate impairment (1–12 months): 21.2%; severe impairment: 3.9%; death: 0.8% | 34.3% |
| Aranaz-Andres et al. (2011), Argentina, Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico, Peru, [ | 58 hospitals; surgery, gynaecology, obstetrics, paediatrics and intensive care ( | 10.5% (1191 patients) had at least one AE | Hospital-acquired infections (37.1%); surgical procedures (28.5%); patient management and nursing care (13.4%); medication (8.2%); diagnostics (6.1%). The 5 most frequent AEs (accounting for 36.2% of all AEs): 127 hospital-acquired pneumonia (9.4%); 111 surgical wound infections (8.2%); 97 pressure ulcers (7.2%); 86 other complications related to surgery or procedure (6.4%) and 67 sepsis (5%). | Any kind of disability: (28.8%); death (5.8%) | 59% |
| Aranaz-Andres et al. (2009), Spain, [ | 24 hospitals, all wards ( | 9.3% (525 patients; 655 AEs) had at least one AE | Medication use (37.4%); nosocomial infections (25.3%); procedure-related (25%); care-related (7.6%); diagnosis-related (2.7%); others (1.8%) | Minor: (45%); moderate: (39%) and severe: (16%resulted in a longer stay: (31.4%); death (4.4%) | 42.6% (overall) (84.2% of all diagnostic AEs, 56.6.% of nosocomial infections, 56% care related AEs) |
| Baker et al. (2004), Canada, [ | 20 hospitals; medical-surgical units ( | 7.5% (255 patients; 289 AEs) had at least one AE | Surgical procedures (34%), drug-related events (24%), clinical management (12%), diagnostic procedures (11%), medical procedures (7%), others e.g., burns, falls (5%) | Minimal impairment (< 1 month): 64.4%; moderate impairment (1–12 months): 12.5%; permanent impairment: 5.2%; death: 15.9% | 36.9% |
| Brennan et al. (1991), US, [ | 51 hospitals; acute care ( | 3.7% (1278 AEs) | Not stated | Minimal impairment (= < 1 month): 56.8%; moderate impairment (> 1 month): 16.5%; permanent disability: 6.5%; death: 13.6% | Preventability not stated;27.6% AE due to negligence |
| D’Amour et al. (2014), Canada, [ | 11 hospitals; medical units ( | 15.3% (412 patients; 568 AEs) had at least one AE | Falls (40.5%); administration errors (29.7%); urinary tract infection (12.3%); pressure ulcers (9.1%); inappropriate use of restraints (4.2%); medication pneumonia (4.0%) | 167 of AE (29.4%) had consequences | Preventability not stated; 76.8% AEs due to inappropriate nursing care |
| Davis et al. (2002) & Davis et al. (2003), New Zealand [ | 13 hospitals; acute care ( | 12.9% (850 AEs) | Operative (24.3%), system: (24%), drug (12.3%), therapy (8.4%), diagnosis (8%), procedure (7.7%), other (e.g., falls) (15.3%) | Minimal impairment (< 1 month): 61.6%; moderate impairment (1-12 months): 19.0%, permanent disability: 10.2%; death: 4.5%; unclear (4.7%) | 37.1% |
| Forster et al. (2004), Canada, [ | 1 hospital (multi-campus); ( | 12.7% (64 patients) | Adverse drug events (50%), surgical complications (31%), nosocomial infections (19%), diagnostic errors (9%), system problems (8%), procedure injuries (8%), anaesthetic injuries (2%), obstetric injuries (2%) | Temporary disability: 10.4%; permanent disability: 1.8%; death (not preventable): 0.6% | 37.5% |
| Grira et al. (2015), Tunisia, [ | 1 hospital; internal medicine ( | 5.2% (26 patients) | Adverse drug events (73%), healthcare associated infections (19%), non-surgical procedures (4%), pressure ulcers (4%) | Prolongation of hospitalization: (27%); disability: (15.4%); readmission: (42.9% of hospitalizations due to AE) | 57.7% |
| Halfon et al. (2017), Switzerland, [ | 1 medium size community hospital; medical and surgical setting ( | 12.3% AEs (64 AEs in 55 medical patients, 82 AEs in 72 surgical patients) | Surgical patients: operative procedures (74%), medications (15%), non-surgical procedures (7%), diagnostic procedures (4%), medical patients: medication (52%), non-surgical procedures (27%), operative procedures (11%), therapeutic decisions (6%), diagnostic procedures (5%) | No or minimal impairment: 60%, Severe impairment: 23% | 42% |
| Kable et al. (2002), Australia, [ | 28 hospitals; surgery ( | 21.9% (1190 AEs) | Operation-related (74.9%): wound infections (2.1%); bleeding (1.4%), wound problems (1.2%), deep vein thrombosis/pulmonary embolisms (0.3%), and pneumonia (0.2%) | Minimal disability (< 1 month): 46.9%, moderate impairment (1-12 months): 36.1%,permanent disability: 17%; death: 4.0% | 47.6% (highly preventable) |
| Letaief et al. (2010), Tunisia, [ | 1 hospital; 18 units ( | 10% (62 AEs) | Surgical/invasive related (54.8%), therapeutic errors (20.9%), diagnostic errors (12.9%), drug-related (6.5%); others (4.9%) | Minimal impairment (< 1 month): 16.1%moderate impairment (1–12 months):56.5%permanent disability: 6.4%; death: 21% | 60% |
| Mendes et al. (2009), Brazil, [ | 3 hospitals; acute care ( | 7.6% had at lease one AE (84 patients; 103 AEs) | Surgical procedures (35.2%), medical procedures(30.6%), diagnoses (10.2%), obstetric (8.3%), medication (5.6%,), fractures (1.9%), anaesthetic (0.9%), system events (6.5%), others (0.9%) | Not stated | 66.7% |
| Rafter et al. (2017), Ireland, [ | 8 hospitals; acute care ( | 12.2% (247 AEs) | Operation related (25.48%), therapeutic events (24.55%), medication related (14.1%), diagnostic events (11.55%), other events, not covered elsewhere (9.25%), non surgical procedure related (7.9%), fracture related (3.92), pregnancy related (1.17%), anaesthetic related (1.14%), fluid related (0.94%) | Minimal impairment (< 1 month): 33.6%moderate impairment (1–12 months): 25.8% permanent disability: 9.9%; death: 6.7% | 72.7% |
| Sari et al. (2007), England, [ | 1 hospital ( | 13.5% (136 AEs) | Not stated | Not stated | Not stated |
| Sommella et al. (2014), Italy, [ | 1 hospital ( | 3.3% (46 AEs) | Not stated | Not stated | Not stated |
| Soop et al. (2009), Sweden, [ | 28 hospitals; acute care units ( | 12.3% (241 AEs) | Invasive procedures including surgical operations (49.4%), drug treatment (30.1%), diagnostic procedure (11.3%), other procedures (14.2%) | Minimal impairment (< 1 months): 53.5% moderate impairment (1–12 months): 29.8% permanent disability: 10.8%; death: 4.1% | 70.1% |
| Sousa et al. (2014), Portugual, [ | 3 hospitals; acute care ( | 11.1% (186 AEs) | Surgical related (27%), drug errors (18.3%), hospital acquired infections (12.2%) | Minimal impairment (< 1 months): 61% moderate impairment (1–12 months): 4.1% permanent disability: 5.7%; death: 10.8% | 53.2% |
| Tartaglia (2012), Italy, [ | 5 hospitals ( | 5.2% ( | Medical patients (37.5%), surgical patients (30.1%), emergency department (6.2%), obstetric patients (4.4%), | Prolongation of hospitalization (66.7%); disability (18.0%); death (10.6%) | 56.7% |
| Thomas et al. (2000), US, [ | 28 hospitals; all acute care units ( | 2.9% (587 AEs) | Surgery (44.9%), drugs (19.3%), medical procedures (13.5%), diagnoses (6.9%), therapy (4. 3%), obstetric (3.6%), falls (1.3%), fractures (0.4%), others (1.5% | Temporary impairment: 73.8%,permanent impairment: 7.5%; death: 6.6% | Preventability not stated;29.2% negligent AEs |
| Vincent et al. (2001), Great Britain, [ | 2 hospitals; general medicine, general surgery, orthopaedics, obstetrics ( | 10.8% (110 patients, 119 AEs) with at least one AEs | General medicine (9.2%), general surgery (16.2%), obstetrics (4%), orthopaedics (14.4%) | Minimal impairment: 66% moderate impairment: 19%permanent disability: 6%; death: 8% | 48% |
| Williams et al. (2008), Scottland, [ | 2 hospitals, acute medical, surgical and obstetric admissions ( | 7.9% (Range: 0% obstetrics, 7.2% medicine, 13% surgery) | Nature of problem: medical and nursing management and monitoring (32.1%), infection related (35.7%), technical procedure related (21.4%), drug/i.v. fluid problem (7.1%), fall (3.6%) | No physical impairment (17.9%), minimal physical impairment (35.7%), moderate impairment (28.6%), permanent impairment (7.1%), contributed to patient death (10.7%) | 43% |
| Wilson et al. (2012), Egypt, Jordan; Kenya; Morocco; Tunisia; Sudan; South Africa; Yemen; [ | 26 hospitals; paediatric hospital; obstetric hospital; general public hospital; teaching hospital (n = 15,548) | 8.2% (between country-variability ranging from 2.5 to 18.4%) | Therapeutic errors (34%), diagnostic (18%), operative (17%); obstetrics (8%), neonatal (7%), non-surgical procedures (5%),drug related (4%), fractures (3%), falls (2%), anaesthesia (2%) | Minimal impairment (< 1 months): 32% moderate impairment (1–12 months): 16% permanent disability: 12%; death: 30% | 83% |
| Wilson et al. (1995), Australia, [ | 28 hospitals (n = 14,179) | 16.6% | Operative (50.3%), diagnoses (13.6%), therapy (12%), drug (10.8%), medical procedures (8.6%), fractures (5.5%), obstetrics (5.5%), falls (2.9%), others (19.1%) | Minimal disability: 46.6% permanent disability: 13.7%; death: 4.9% | 51.2% |
| Zegers et al. (2009), Netherland, [ | 21 (university, teaching and general) hospital ( | 5.7% (6.8% surgical; 4.8% non-surgical) | Surgery (54.2%), medical procedures (17%), drug/fluid (15.3%), diagnostic (6.3%), other clinical management (3.7%), other (e.g. falls) (2.1%), discharge (1.4%) | No or minimal physical impairment: 56.8%permanent disability: 5.0%; death: 7.8% | 39.6% (surgical: 39.5%, non-surgical 40.3%) |