Siewert Bettina, Brook Olga R, Hochman Mary, Eisenberg Ronald L
1 All authors: Department of Radiology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, 330 Brookline Ave, Boston, MA 02215.
AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2016 Mar;206(3):573-9. doi: 10.2214/AJR.15.15117.
The purpose of this study is to analyze the impact of communication errors on patient care, customer satisfaction, and work-flow efficiency and to identify opportunities for quality improvement.
We performed a search of our quality assurance database for communication errors submitted from August 1, 2004, through December 31, 2014. Cases were analyzed regarding the step in the imaging process at which the error occurred (i.e., ordering, scheduling, performance of examination, study interpretation, or result communication). The impact on patient care was graded on a 5-point scale from none (0) to catastrophic (4). The severity of impact between errors in result communication and those that occurred at all other steps was compared. Error evaluation was performed independently by two board-certified radiologists. Statistical analysis was performed using the chi-square test and kappa statistics.
Three hundred eighty of 422 cases were included in the study. One hundred ninety-nine of the 380 communication errors (52.4%) occurred at steps other than result communication, including ordering (13.9%; n = 53), scheduling (4.7%; n = 18), performance of examination (30.0%; n = 114), and study interpretation (3.7%; n = 14). Result communication was the single most common step, accounting for 47.6% (181/380) of errors. There was no statistically significant difference in impact severity between errors that occurred during result communication and those that occurred at other times (p = 0.29). In 37.9% of cases (144/380), there was an impact on patient care, including 21 minor impacts (5.5%; result communication, n = 13; all other steps, n = 8), 34 moderate impacts (8.9%; result communication, n = 12; all other steps, n = 22), and 89 major impacts (23.4%; result communication, n = 45; all other steps, n = 44). In 62.1% (236/380) of cases, no impact was noted, but 52.6% (200/380) of cases had the potential for an impact.
Among 380 communication errors in a radiology department, 37.9% had a direct impact on patient care, with an additional 52.6% having a potential impact. Most communication errors (52.4%) occurred at steps other than result communication, with similar severity of impact.
本研究旨在分析沟通失误对患者护理、客户满意度及工作流程效率的影响,并确定质量改进的机会。
我们在质量保证数据库中搜索了2004年8月1日至2014年12月31日期间提交的沟通失误案例。分析了失误发生在成像流程中的步骤(即医嘱下达、检查安排、检查执行、影像解读或结果传达)。对患者护理的影响按5分制进行分级,从无影响(0分)到灾难性影响(4分)。比较了结果传达失误与其他所有步骤失误的影响严重程度。由两名具备委员会认证资格的放射科医生独立进行失误评估。采用卡方检验和kappa统计进行统计分析。
422例案例中有380例纳入研究。380例沟通失误中有199例(52.4%)发生在结果传达以外的步骤,包括医嘱下达(13.9%;n = 53)、检查安排(4.7%;n = 18)、检查执行(30.0%;n = 114)和影像解读(3.7%;n = 14)。结果传达是最常见的单一步骤,占失误的47.6%(181/380)。结果传达期间发生的失误与其他时间发生的失误在影响严重程度上无统计学显著差异(p = 0.29)。在37.9%的案例(144/380)中,对患者护理有影响,包括21例轻微影响(5.5%;结果传达,n = 13;其他所有步骤,n = 8)、34例中度影响(8.9%;结果传达,n = 12;其他所有步骤,n = 22)和89例重大影响(23.4%;结果传达,n = 45;其他所有步骤,n = 44)。在62.1%(236/380)的案例中未发现影响,但52.6%(200/380)的案例有产生影响的可能性。
在放射科的380例沟通失误中,37.9%对患者护理有直接影响,另有52.6%有潜在影响。大多数沟通失误(52.4%)发生在结果传达以外的步骤,影响严重程度相似。