Williams L Keoki, Pladevall Manel, Fendrick A Mark, Lafata Jennifer Elston, McMahon Laurence F
Department of Internal Medicine, Division of General Medicine, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, USA.
Jt Comm J Qual Saf. 2003 Sep;29(9):460-7. doi: 10.1016/s1549-3741(03)29055-9.
This study compared the number of care-related injuries reported to the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) with the number reported to 15 mandatory-reporting states.
The primary outcome measure was the number of patient injuries reported to each in 1999.
In all categories examined, the number of reports submitted by accredited hospitals to states equaled or exceeded the number reported to JCAHO.
State-reporting systems identified a greater number of care-related injuries than did the JCAHO system. Although JCAHO received fewer reports from accredited hospitals, its process requires an analysis of the event and a prevention plan, and it disseminates the lessons learned from reported events. For adverse event reporting to improve patient safety, there must be assurances that lessons are learned from these events, preventive measures are taken, and information is shared so others may benefit without having to experience the same adverse event.
This study represents an early attempt to understand the system characteristics that influence hospital reporting of care-related patient injuries. As reporting systems become more prevalent and standardized, the influence of factors such as legal protections, confidentiality, and technology on reporting should be better understood.
本研究比较了向医疗组织认证联合委员会(JCAHO)报告的与护理相关的伤害数量和向15个强制报告州报告的数量。
主要结局指标是1999年向每个机构报告的患者伤害数量。
在所有检查的类别中,经认可的医院向各州提交的报告数量等于或超过向JCAHO报告的数量。
州报告系统识别出的与护理相关的伤害数量比JCAHO系统更多。尽管JCAHO收到的经认可医院的报告较少,但其流程要求对事件进行分析并制定预防计划,并且会传播从报告事件中学到的经验教训。为了通过不良事件报告提高患者安全,必须确保从这些事件中吸取教训、采取预防措施并共享信息,以便其他人无需经历相同的不良事件就能从中受益。
本研究是了解影响医院报告与护理相关患者伤害的系统特征的早期尝试。随着报告系统变得更加普遍和标准化,应更好地理解法律保护、保密性和技术等因素对报告的影响。