Panagioti Maria, Stokes Jonathan, Esmail Aneez, Coventry Peter, Cheraghi-Sohi Sudeh, Alam Rahul, Bower Peter
NIHR School for Primary Care Research, Centre for Primary Care, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom.
NIHR Greater Manchester Primary Care Patient Safety Translational Research Centre (Greater Manchester PSTRC), Manchester Academic Health Science Centre University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2015 Aug 28;10(8):e0135947. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0135947. eCollection 2015.
Multimorbidity is increasingly prevalent and represents a major challenge in primary care. Patients with multimorbidity are potentially more likely to experience safety incidents due to the complexity of their needs and frequency of their interactions with health services. However, rigorous syntheses of the link between patient safety incidents and multimorbidity are not available. This review examined the relationship between multimorbidity and patient safety incidents in primary care.
We followed our published protocol (PROSPERO registration number: CRD42014007434). Medline, Embase and CINAHL were searched up to May 2015. Study design and quality were assessed. Odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) were calculated for the associations between multimorbidity and two categories of patient safety outcomes: 'active patient safety incidents' (such as adverse drug events and medical complications) and 'precursors of safety incidents' (such as prescription errors, medication non-adherence, poor quality of care and diagnostic errors). Meta-analyses using random effects models were undertaken.
Eighty six relevant comparisons from 75 studies were included in the analysis. Meta-analysis demonstrated that physical-mental multimorbidity was associated with an increased risk for 'active patient safety incidents' (OR = 2.39, 95% CI = 1.40 to 3.38) and 'precursors of safety incidents' (OR = 1.69, 95% CI = 1.36 to 2.03). Physical multimorbidity was associated with an increased risk for active safety incidents (OR = 1.63, 95% CI = 1.45 to 1.80) but was not associated with precursors of safety incidents (OR = 1.02, 95% CI = 0.90 to 1.13). Statistical heterogeneity was high and the methodological quality of the studies was generally low.
The association between multimorbidity and patient safety is complex, and varies by type of multimorbidity and type of safety incident. Our analyses suggest that multimorbidity involving mental health may be a key driver of safety incidents, which has important implication for the design and targeting of interventions to improve safety. High quality studies examining the mechanisms of patient safety incidents in patients with multimorbidity are needed, with the goal of promoting effective service delivery and ameliorating threats to safety in this group of patients.
多种疾病并存的情况日益普遍,是初级医疗保健面临的一项重大挑战。由于需求复杂且与医疗服务的互动频繁,患有多种疾病的患者更有可能发生安全事件。然而,目前尚无关于患者安全事件与多种疾病并存之间关联的严谨综合分析。本综述探讨了初级医疗保健中多种疾病并存与患者安全事件之间的关系。
我们遵循已发表的方案(PROSPERO注册号:CRD42014007434)。检索了截至2015年5月的Medline、Embase和CINAHL数据库。评估了研究设计和质量。计算了多种疾病并存与两类患者安全结局之间关联的比值比(OR)和95%置信区间(95%CI):“主动患者安全事件”(如药物不良事件和医疗并发症)和“安全事件先兆”(如处方错误、用药依从性差、护理质量差和诊断错误)。采用随机效应模型进行荟萃分析。
分析纳入了75项研究中的86项相关比较。荟萃分析表明,身心多种疾病并存与“主动患者安全事件”风险增加相关(OR = 2.39,95%CI = 1.40至3.38)以及与“安全事件先兆”相关(OR = 1.69,95%CI = 1.36至2.03)。身体多种疾病并存与主动安全事件风险增加相关(OR = 1.63,95%CI = 1.45至1.80),但与安全事件先兆无关(OR = 1.02,95%CI = 0.90至1.13)。统计异质性较高,研究的方法学质量普遍较低。
多种疾病并存与患者安全之间的关联较为复杂,因多种疾病并存的类型和安全事件的类型而异。我们的分析表明,涉及心理健康的多种疾病并存可能是安全事件的关键驱动因素,这对于改善安全的干预措施的设计和目标人群具有重要意义。需要开展高质量研究,以探究患有多种疾病的患者发生安全事件的机制,目的是促进有效的服务提供并减轻对这组患者安全的威胁。