Kreckler S, Catchpole K, McCulloch P, Handa A
Oxford University, Nuffield Department of Surgery, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK.
Qual Saf Health Care. 2009 Apr;18(2):116-20. doi: 10.1136/qshc.2008.026534.
To evaluate the process of incident reporting in a surgical setting. In particular: the influence of event outcome on reporting behaviour; staff perception of surgical complications as reportable events.
Anonymous web-based questionnaire survey.
General Surgical Department in a UK teaching hospital.
Of 203 eligible staff, 55 (76.4%) doctors and 82 (62.6%) nurses participated.
Knowledge and use of local reporting system; propensity to report incidents which vary by outcome (harm, no harm, harm prevented); propensity to report surgical complications; practical and psychological barriers to reporting.
Nurses were significantly more likely to know of the local reporting system and to have recently completed a report than doctors. The level of harm (F(1.8,246) = 254.2, p<0.001), incident type (F(1.9,258) = 64.4, p<0.001) and profession (F(1,135) = 20.7, p<0.001) all significantly affected the likelihood of reporting. Staff were most likely to report an incident when harm occurred. Doctors were significantly less likely to report surgical complications than other types of incident (15% vs 53%, z = 4.633, p<0.001). Fear was a significantly less important barrier to reporting than other reasons (z = -3.49, p<0.0002).
An incident is more likely to be reported if harm results. Surgical complications are not generally perceived to be "reportable incidents," but they are addressed in Mortality and Morbidity meetings (M&M). Integrating M&M and incident reporting data will result in more comprehensive healthcare safety systems.
评估外科环境下的事件报告流程。具体而言:事件结果对报告行为的影响;工作人员将手术并发症视为可报告事件的认知。
基于网络的匿名问卷调查。
英国一家教学医院的普通外科。
203名符合条件的工作人员中,55名(76.4%)医生和82名(62.6%)护士参与了调查。
对当地报告系统的了解和使用情况;根据结果(造成伤害、未造成伤害、伤害被预防)不同而报告事件的倾向;报告手术并发症的倾向;报告的实际和心理障碍。
护士比医生更有可能知晓当地报告系统且近期完成过报告。伤害程度(F(1.8,246) = 254.2,p<0.001)、事件类型(F(1.9,258) = 64.4,p<0.001)和职业(F(1,135) = 20.7,p<0.001)均显著影响报告的可能性。伤害发生时工作人员最有可能报告事件。医生报告手术并发症的可能性显著低于其他类型事件(15%对53%,z = 4.633,p<0.001)。恐惧作为报告障碍的重要性显著低于其他原因(z = -3.49,p<0.0002)。
如果造成伤害,事件更有可能被报告。手术并发症通常不被视为“可报告事件”,但在死亡和发病率会议(M&M)中会被提及。整合M&M和事件报告数据将形成更全面的医疗安全系统。