Beckmann Ursula, Bohringer Christian, Carless Ruth, Gillies Donna M, Runciman William B, Wu Albert W, Pronovost Peter
Division of Anaesthesia, Intensive Care and Pain Management, John Hunter Hospital, Newcastle, NSW, Australia.
Crit Care Med. 2003 Apr;31(4):1006-11. doi: 10.1097/01.CCM.0000060016.21525.3C.
Quality assurance techniques applied within the healthcare industry have been widely used and are intended to improve patient outcomes. Two methods that have been utilized are incident reporting and medical chart review (MCR). The objectives for this study were to evaluate facilitated incident monitoring (FIM) and MCR in the intensive care setting.
Cross-sectional comparison of prospective FIM and retrospective MCR.
Tertiary, 12-bed, closed intensive care unit (ICU) in Australia providing adult and pediatric intensive care to surgical, medical, trauma, and retrieval patients.
Patients present or admitted to the ICU during the 2-month study period.
During the study period, there were 176 admissions involving 164 patients. A total of 100 FIM reports, of which 70 related to care provided by the ICU team, identified 221 incidents. There were 30 FIM reports that described adverse events, of which only one related to ICU team care. Potential of harm was estimated to be minimal in 49% and significant in 51%; 84% of incidents were considered preventable. Important contextual information was provided, including evidence for the importance of system factors. MCR identified 132 adverse events involving 48% of charts, and 47 related to ICU team care. Common adverse events included nosocomial infections, aspiration, neurologic compromise, respiratory arrest, delayed diagnosis, and treatment. Twenty percent of adverse events were considered preventable, and in 41%, there was evidence of system causation.
FIM provided more contextual information about incidents and identified a larger number and higher proportion of preventable problems than MCR, but FIM identified few iatrogenic infections, problems with pain management, or problems leading to ICU admission. FIM is easily incorporated into the clinical routine. This study suggests that incident monitoring may be more useful for identifying quality problems, and it could be supplemented by selective audits and focused MCR to detect problems not reported well by FIM.
医疗行业应用的质量保证技术已被广泛使用,旨在改善患者治疗结果。已采用的两种方法是事件报告和病历审查(MCR)。本研究的目的是评估重症监护环境中的简易事件监测(FIM)和MCR。
前瞻性FIM与回顾性MCR的横断面比较。
澳大利亚一家拥有12张床位的三级封闭式重症监护病房(ICU),为外科、内科、创伤和转运患者提供成人及儿科重症监护。
在为期2个月的研究期间入住或进入ICU的患者。
在研究期间,共有176例入院病例,涉及164名患者。共100份FIM报告,其中70份与ICU团队提供的护理有关,确定了221起事件。有30份FIM报告描述了不良事件,其中只有1起与ICU团队护理有关。估计49%的事件危害可能性极小,51%的事件危害可能性很大;84%的事件被认为是可预防的。提供了重要的背景信息,包括系统因素重要性的证据。MCR确定了132起不良事件,涉及48%的病历,其中47起与ICU团队护理有关。常见的不良事件包括医院感染、误吸、神经功能损害、呼吸骤停、诊断延迟和治疗延误。20%的不良事件被认为是可预防的,41%的不良事件有系统因果关系的证据。
与MCR相比,FIM提供了更多关于事件的背景信息,识别出更多数量和更高比例的可预防问题,但FIM识别出的医源性感染、疼痛管理问题或导致入住ICU的问题较少。FIM很容易纳入临床常规。本研究表明,事件监测可能对识别质量问题更有用,可以通过选择性审核和重点MCR来补充,以检测FIM报告不佳的问题。