University of New Mexico, Department of Emergency Medicine, Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001, USA.
Ann Emerg Med. 2010 Apr;55(4):336-40. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2009.08.020. Epub 2009 Oct 24.
Although national standards to address patient safety exist, their relevance to emergency department (ED) patient safety is unclear. We survey practicing emergency physicians to assess their perceptions of the relative importance of patient safety concerns and how these varied by urban/rural location and practice characteristics.
We developed and analyzed electronically collected survey data that assessed emergency physician perceptions of patient safety risks. American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) members rated 16 patient safety concerns with a 5-point Likert scale.
Of 2,507 emergency physician respondents, 1,114 (44%) practiced in urban, 1,056 (42%) in suburban, and 337 (13%) in rural settings. Crowding from inpatient boarding (mean Likert scale score 4.3), availability of specialty consultation (mean 4.1), and nursing shortages (mean 3.9) were the greatest concerns. Rural respondents ranked consultant availability (mean 4.3), lack of follow-up after ED care (mean 3.8), and nurse shortages (mean 3.8) as top concerns. Crowding was the greatest concern for suburban (mean 4.3) and urban emergency physicians (mean 4.5) but was ranked seventh by rural emergency physicians (mean 3.5). Crowding was perceived as a greater problem as hospital size, ED volume, and the percentage of patients who left without being seen increased, regardless of practice location.
In this sample of practicing emergency physicians, rural emergency physicians' patient safety concerns differ from those of their urban/suburban counterparts. For urban/suburban emergency physicians, crowding is the greatest safety concern; for rural emergency physicians, consultant availability was the greatest concern. Emergency physicians' greatest concerns are not routinely measured and reported as part of national patient safety benchmarking programs.
尽管存在解决患者安全问题的国家标准,但这些标准与急诊科(ED)患者安全的相关性尚不清楚。我们调查了执业急诊医师,以评估他们对患者安全问题的相对重要性的看法,以及这些看法如何因城乡地理位置和执业特点而有所不同。
我们开发并分析了电子收集的调查数据,该数据评估了急诊医师对患者安全风险的看法。美国急诊医师学院(ACEP)成员使用 5 分李克特量表对 16 项患者安全问题进行了评分。
在 2507 名急诊医师应答者中,1114 名(44%)在城市、1056 名(42%)在郊区、337 名(13%)在农村执业。住院患者加床造成的拥挤(平均李克特量表评分 4.3)、专科咨询的可及性(平均 4.1)和护理人员短缺(平均 3.9)是最大的关注点。农村应答者将顾问的可及性(平均 4.3)、ED 治疗后缺乏随访(平均 3.8)和护理人员短缺(平均 3.8)列为最关注的问题。对于郊区(平均 4.3)和城市急诊医师(平均 4.5),拥挤是最大的关注点,但农村急诊医师将其排名第七(平均 3.5)。无论执业地点如何,随着医院规模、ED 量和未就诊离开患者的百分比增加,拥挤被认为是更大的问题。
在本研究中,农村和城市/郊区的执业急诊医师的患者安全关注点不同。对于城市/郊区的急诊医师,拥挤是最大的安全关注点;对于农村的急诊医师,顾问的可及性是最大的关注点。急诊医师最关注的问题通常没有作为国家患者安全基准计划的一部分进行常规测量和报告。