| Literature DB >> 30805349 |
Jessica Wallis1, Daniel Fletcher1, Adrienne Bentley2, John Ludders1.
Abstract
Medical errors are a leading cause of mortality in human medicine. In contrast, errors in veterinary medicine are rarely discussed, and there is little known about their nature and frequency. This study aimed to evaluate the type and severity of medical errors reported in three veterinary hospitals. The voluntary online incident reporting systems of a small animal teaching hospital, large animal teaching hospital, and small animal multi-specialty practice were reviewed. Reports were included if they were entered between February 2015 and March 2018, and involved an incident pertaining to patient safety. The reporting systems classified errors into the following categories: drug, iatrogenic, system, communication, lab, oversight, staff, or equipment errors. In addition, all incidents were classified as resulting in either a near miss, harmless hit, adverse incident, or unsafe condition. Adverse incidents were further evaluated retrospectively for error severity. A total of 560 incident reports were included for analysis. Drug errors were the most frequently reported in all three hospitals, followed by failures of communication. Errors most commonly reached patients without causing harm (45%); however, 15% of all incidents resulted in patient harm. Eight percent of patients harmed suffered permanent morbidity or death. A higher proportion of adverse incidents were reported in the small animal teaching hospital than in the other two practice settings. This study demonstrates that medical errors have a substantial impact on veterinary patients. Establishing that drug and communication errors are most frequent in a variety of hospitals is the first step toward interventions to improve patient safety and outcomes in veterinary medicine.Entities:
Keywords: adverse; harm; incident; medical error; reporting; safety; veterinary
Year: 2019 PMID: 30805349 PMCID: PMC6370638 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2019.00012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Error types and their definitions in the incident reporting system.
| Drug | Any issue with drug administration |
| Iatrogenic | Complication from procedure or treatment other than a drug |
| System | Delays, missed treatments, protocol issues |
| Communication | Misidentified patient, confusion over orders, failure to share information |
| Labs | Lost specimens, mislabeled samples, results not reported, delays, improper studies |
| Oversight | Judgment issues, missed diagnosis, misinterpretation of data, deviations from standard of care |
| Staff | Insufficient staff numbers, lack of access to needed staff, incident during staff training |
| Equipment | Inaccessibility, wrong equipment, failures, supply problems |
Incident types and their definitions.
| Near miss | Error did not reach the patient, but could have caused harm if it had |
| Harmless hit | Error reached the patient but did not cause harm |
| Adverse incident | Error reached the patient and caused harm |
| Unsafe condition | Circumstance or condition that increases the probability of a patient safety event |
Numbers of incident reports, patient visits, and errors per 1,000 patient visits for each hospital (see Figure 1 for hospital abbreviations).
| SAU | 258 | 67,917 | 3.8 |
| LAU | 51 | 7,856 | 6.5 |
| SAP | 251 | 30,175 | 8.3 |
| Total | 560 | 105,948 | 5.3 |
Figure 1Distribution of proportion of error types with respect to the total number in incidents reported in each of the three veterinary hospitals (NB: totals for a given hospital may be >100% as multiple error types could be included in an incident report). SAU, small animal teaching hospital; LAU, large animal teaching hospital; SAP, small animal referral practice.
Distribution of incident types at each hospital (see Figure 1 for hospital abbreviations).
| Near miss | 31 (12.0) | 5 (9.8) | 71 (28.3) | 107 (19.1) |
| Harmless hit | 116 (45.0) | 18 (35.3) | 124 (49.4) | 258 (46.1) |
| Adverse incident | 51 (19.8) | 11 (21.6) | 23 (9.2) | 85 (15.2) |
| Unsafe condition | 60 (23.3) | 17 (33.3) | 33 (13.1) | 110 (19.6) |
Like superscripts indicate significant difference.
p ≤ 0.001.
p ≤ 0.01.
p < 0.05.
Distribution of severity of patient harm due to adverse incidents at each hospital (see Figure 1 for hospital abbreviations).
| Temporary harm | 48 (94.1) | 8 (82.7) | 22 (95.7) | 78 (91.8) |
| Permanent harm | 0 | 2 (18.2) | 1 (4.3) | 3 (3.5) |
| Death | 3 (5.9) | 1 (9.1) | 0 (0) | 4 (4.7) |
Distribution by type of drug error and hospital (see Figure 1 for hospital abbreviations).
| Wrong patient | 6 (3.5) | 0 (0) | 7 (5.2) | 13 (3.8) |
| Wrong drug | 37 (21.4) | 10 (34.5) | 15 (11.2) | 62 (18) |
| Wrong dose | 111 (64.2) | 13 (44.8) | 75 (56) | 199 (57.8) |
| Wrong route | 7 (4.0) | 4 (13.8) | 9 (6.7) | 20 (5.8) |
| Wrong time | 12 (6.9) | 2 (6.9) | 28 (20.9) | 42 (12.2) |
Like superscripts indicate significant difference.
p = 0.005.
p = 0.001.
Distribution by type of communication error for each hospital (see Figure 1 for hospital abbreviations).
| Source | 20 (38.5) | 6 (31.6) | 33 (37.1) | 59 (34.7) |
| Transmission | 18 (34.6) | 6 (31.6) | 42 (47.2) | 66 (38.8) |
| Receiver | 14 (26.9) | 7 (36.8) | 14 (15.7) | 35 (20.6) |
Distribution by occupation of reporters submitting incident reports at each hospital (see Figure 1 for hospital abbreviations).
| Doctor | 67 (36.7) | 26 (53.1) | 102 (40.5) | 195 (35.3) |
| Technician | 162 (64.5) | 13 (26.5) | 93 (36.9) | 268 (48.6) |
| Attendant/assistant/student | 13 (5.2) | 7 (14.3) | 8 (3.2) | 28 (5.1) |
| Non-technical staff | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 37 (14.7) | 37 (6.7) |
| Pharmacist | 9 (3.6) | 3 (6.1) | 5 (2) | 17 (3.1) |
| Other | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 7 (2.8) | 7 (1.3) |
Other refers primarily to administration, management and client service staff.
Like superscripts indicate significant difference.
p ≤ 0.001.
p = 0.003.