Panesar Sukhmeet Singh, deSilva Debra, Carson-Stevens Andrew, Cresswell Kathrin M, Salvilla Sarah Angostora, Slight Sarah Patricia, Javad Sundas, Netuveli Gopalakrishnan, Larizgoitia Itziar, Donaldson Liam J, Bates David W, Sheikh Aziz
Section of Health Services Research, Department of Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA.
The Evidence Centre, London, UK.
BMJ Qual Saf. 2016 Jul;25(7):544-53. doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2015-004178. Epub 2015 Dec 29.
Improving patient safety is at the forefront of policy and practice. While considerable progress has been made in understanding the frequency, causes and consequences of error in hospitals, less is known about the safety of primary care.
We investigated how often patient safety incidents occur in primary care and how often these were associated with patient harm.
We searched 18 databases and contacted international experts to identify published and unpublished studies available between 1 January 1980 and 31 July 2014. Patient safety incidents of any type were eligible. Eligible studies were critically appraised using validated instruments and data were descriptively and narratively synthesised.
Nine systematic reviews and 100 primary studies were included. Studies reported between <1 and 24 patient safety incidents per 100 consultations. The median from population-based record review studies was 2-3 incidents for every 100 consultations/records reviewed. It was estimated that around 4% of these incidents may be associated with severe harm, defined as significantly impacting on a patient's well-being, including long-term physical or psychological issues or death (range <1% to 44% of incidents). Incidents relating to diagnosis and prescribing were most likely to result in severe harm.
Millions of people throughout the world use primary care services on any given day. This review suggests that safety incidents are relatively common, but most do not result in serious harm that reaches the patient. Diagnostic and prescribing incidents are the most likely to result in avoidable harm.
This systematic review is registered with the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO CRD42012002304).
提高患者安全是政策和实践的首要任务。虽然在了解医院差错的发生频率、原因和后果方面已取得了相当大的进展,但对于初级保健的安全性却知之甚少。
我们调查了初级保健中患者安全事件的发生频率以及这些事件与患者伤害相关的频率。
我们检索了18个数据库,并联系了国际专家,以确定1980年1月1日至2014年7月31日期间已发表和未发表的研究。任何类型的患者安全事件均符合条件。使用经过验证的工具对符合条件的研究进行严格评估,并对数据进行描述性和叙述性综合分析。
纳入了9项系统评价和100项初级研究。研究报告每100次会诊中患者安全事件的发生率在不到1次至24次之间。基于人群的记录回顾研究的中位数是每100次会诊/审查记录中有2至3次事件。据估计,这些事件中约4%可能与严重伤害相关,严重伤害定义为对患者的福祉有重大影响,包括长期身体或心理问题或死亡(事件发生率范围为<1%至44%)。与诊断和处方相关的事件最有可能导致严重伤害。
全世界每天有数以百万计的人使用初级保健服务。这项综述表明,安全事件相对常见,但大多数不会给患者带来严重伤害。诊断和处方事件最有可能导致可避免的伤害。
本系统评价已在国际系统评价前瞻性注册库(PROSPERO CRD42012002304)注册。