| Literature DB >> 35673059 |
Abstract
Intensive Care Units (ICUs) are recognized as a susceptible area to potential errors resulting in adverse outcomes. Healthcare professionals are multi-tasking, information-overloaded, and often with an interruptive workflow in ICUs. Such a stressful work environment poses challenges to reach a shared mental model in clinical practice, which leads to ineffective communication and reduces their awareness of potential safety risks. Despite data sources or materials supporting patient safety and team training being available, little research has been conducted to measure teamwork in clinical practice and to detect inefficient communication factors. The advent of telehealth provides an opportunity for remote video watchers to observe the entire process of patient care and related team activities. The potential application of video analyzing algorithms to video recordings can detect safety risks retrospectively. This article presents major teamwork and patient safety challenges in ICUs, and the opportunities of utilizing available data and telehealth including video recordings in future patient safety and teamwork research.Entities:
Keywords: Intensive care units; Patient safety; Teamwork; Telehealth
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35673059 PMCID: PMC9201747 DOI: 10.3233/SHTI220120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stud Health Technol Inform ISSN: 0926-9630
Data sources in support of patient safety research
| Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|
|
| |
|
The ability to study a large collection of relatively rare events; Extensive data including detailed clinical information on large collections of difficult intubations, pulmonary aspirations, central venous catheter complications, medication errors. |
Bias towards more severe injuries; Failure to draw together all the evidence and consider its implications; Inadequate clinical notes impede the whole process; |
|
| |
|
Present a granular, precise, and comprehensive view of patients; Using standard terms represents diagnoses, procedures, labs, &medications; Supplement of incident reporting; Offer an automatic way to evaluate medication orders and administrations (readmissions, central line-associated infections). |
EHRs do not include medication administrations during surgery and resuscitations. Medication orders do not have standard terms Free-text notes contain extensive patient safety information without standardization. |
|
| |
|
Incident analysis and feedback to EHR developers can help mitigate future risks to patients. Investigate EHR-related adverse events, near-misses and report them to the national board using standardized methods. The distribution of EHR-related safety incidents is nationwide. Guided by an 8-dimension sociotechnical model |
Only health IT-related reports. Minor or latent errors and near-misses may not be included. Self-reported data is biased to reporters’ recall and knowledge. Standardized data collection models not widely used. Limited access to Veterans Health Administration |
|
| |
|
Harmonize across governmental health agencies and incorporate feedback from the private sector. Non-identifiable and aggregated data are stored in the Network of Patient Safety Databases (NPSD), Supporting Dashboards, Chartbooks, AHRQ’s National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report. |
A separate reporting process beyond clinical information systems. The Common Formats are evolving. Two versions in use. PSE in ICUs are scattered or may be under-reported as the formats do not specify ICU settings. |
|
| |
|
A national repository of adverse drug events, A microcosm of drug treatment and outcomes. Drug names matched to RxNorm reference codes, Adverse drug events matched to MedDRA. Structured sections (excluding narratives) are publicly accessible. |
Missing physiologic, psychologic, or demographic information. Signals detected from FAERS need to be validated by other sources such as EHRs and biomedical literature. Narratives for individual case reports can be requested. |
Figure 1-An ICU workflow for a hyponatremia patient.