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患者安全——多少才足够?

Patient safety--how much is enough?

作者信息

Warburton Rebecca Nunn

机构信息

School of Public Administration, University of Victoria, PO Box 1700, Stn CSC, Victoria, BC, Canada V8W 2Y2.

出版信息

Health Policy. 2005 Feb;71(2):223-32. doi: 10.1016/j.healthpol.2004.08.009.

Abstract

Awareness of errors in health care has skyrocketed in recent years, and huge resources have been mobilised to measure and reduce the harm. This is a good thing, and long overdue. But current improvement recommendations have ignored the costs of prevention and have prioritized improvements by the rigour with which they have been studied. The current proliferation of safety goals and required or recommended safe practices threatens to overwhelm the capacity of hospitals to safely implement change, yet the cost-effectiveness of most proposed improvements remains unknown. Unless we collect information on cost-effectiveness, and use it to prioritize both improvement initiatives and new safety research, society will not gain the maximum return (in terms of safety) for whatever resources are put into error reduction. This would be a bad thing. Hospitals are complex systems, largely dependent on human performance, so improving hospital safety is not simple. Every change must be implemented with an understanding of human factors engineering and safety science, and even good changes can create unexpected new hazards. Increased safety precautions reduce preventable adverse events but generally impose both direct costs (to implement the safety precautions) and hidden costs (in the form of delays, new errors, or lost opportunities elsewhere). Perfect safety is not always possible and near-perfect-safety may impose unacceptably high costs. The goal of minimizing the total cost of both accidents and accident-prevention requires information on both costs and effects of specific safety improvements. Such information is also needed to prioritize suggested safety improvements, when all cannot be implemented immediately. This evidence can best be produced using the economic evaluation loop, an iterative process involving routine, periodic, assessment of costs and effects, and targeted original research where initial estimates reveal uncertainty in key values.

摘要

近年来,医疗保健领域对错误的认识急剧上升,并且已经调动了大量资源来衡量和减少危害。这是一件好事,而且早就该这样做了。但是,目前的改进建议忽略了预防成本,并且根据研究的严谨程度来确定改进的优先级。当前安全目标的激增以及规定或推荐的安全做法,有可能使医院安全实施变革的能力不堪重负,然而大多数提议改进措施的成本效益仍然未知。除非我们收集成本效益信息,并将其用于确定改进措施和新安全研究的优先级,否则社会在投入减少错误的任何资源时,都无法获得最大的(在安全方面的)回报。这将是一件坏事。医院是复杂的系统,很大程度上依赖于人的表现,因此提高医院安全性并非易事。每一项变革都必须在理解人因工程学和安全科学的基础上实施,即使是好的变革也可能产生意想不到的新危害。增加安全预防措施可以减少可预防的不良事件,但通常会带来直接成本(用于实施安全预防措施)和隐性成本(以延误、新错误或其他地方失去的机会的形式)。完美的安全并非总是可行的,近乎完美的安全可能会带来高得令人无法接受的成本。将事故和事故预防的总成本降至最低的目标,需要有关特定安全改进措施的成本和效果的信息。当所有建议的安全改进措施不能立即全部实施时,也需要这些信息来确定其优先级。最好使用经济评估循环来产生这种证据,这是一个迭代过程,包括对成本和效果进行常规、定期评估,以及在初步估计显示关键值存在不确定性时进行有针对性的原创研究。

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