Pohlman Katherine A, Carroll Linda, Hartling Lisa, Tsuyuki Ross, Vohra Sunita
Research Institute, Parker University, Dallas, TX.
School of Public Health, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2016 Sep;39(7):487-493. doi: 10.1016/j.jmpt.2016.06.003. Epub 2016 Aug 13.
The purpose of this cross-sectional survey was to evaluate attitudes and opinions of doctors of chiropractic (DCs) specializing in pediatric care toward patient safety.
The Medical Office Survey on Patient Safety Culture of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality was adapted for providers who use spinal manipulation therapy and sent out to 2 US chiropractic organizations' pediatric council members (n = 400) between February and April 2014. The survey measured 12 patient safety dimensions and included questions on patient safety items and quality issues, information exchange, and overall clinic ratings. Data analyses included a percent composite average and a nonrespondent analysis.
The response rate was 29.5% (n = 118). Almost one- third of respondents' patients were pediatric (≤17 years of age). DCs with a pediatric certification were 3 times more likely to respond (P < .001), but little qualitative differences were found in responses. The patient safety dimensions with the highest positive composite percentages were Organizational Learning (both administration and clinical) and Teamwork (>90%). Patient Care Tracking/Follow-up and Work Pressure and Pace were patient safety dimensions that had the lowest positive composite scores (<85%). The responses also indicated that there was concern regarding information exchange with insurance/third-party payors. Two quality issues identified for improvement were (1) updating a patient's medication list and (2) following up on critically abnormal results from a laboratory or imaging test within 1 day. The average overall patient safety rating score indicated that 83% of respondents rated themselves as "very good" or "excellent."
Compared with 2014 Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality physician referent data from medical offices, pediatric DCs appear to have more positive patient safety attitudes and opinions. Future patient safety studies need to prospectively evaluate safety performance with direct feedback from patients and compare results with these self-assessed safety attitudes, as well as make further use of this survey to develop a comparable database for spinal manipulation providers.
本横断面调查旨在评估专门从事儿科护理的整脊疗法医生(DC)对患者安全的态度和看法。
美国医疗保健研究与质量局的医疗办公室患者安全文化调查针对使用脊柱推拿疗法的提供者进行了改编,并于2014年2月至4月间发送给2个美国整脊组织的儿科委员会成员(n = 400)。该调查测量了12个患者安全维度,包括有关患者安全项目和质量问题、信息交流以及诊所总体评分的问题。数据分析包括百分比综合平均值和无应答分析。
应答率为29.5%(n = 118)。近三分之一应答者的患者为儿科患者(≤17岁)。拥有儿科认证的DC应答可能性高出3倍(P <.001),但应答中未发现明显的质性差异。综合百分比最高的患者安全维度是组织学习(管理和临床方面)和团队合作(>90%)。患者护理跟踪/随访以及工作压力和节奏是综合得分最低的患者安全维度(<85%)。应答还表明,对与保险/第三方付款人的信息交流存在担忧。确定需要改进的两个质量问题是:(1)更新患者的用药清单;(2)在1天内跟进实验室或影像检查的严重异常结果。患者安全总体评分的平均得分表明,83%的应答者将自己评为“非常好”或“优秀”。
与2014年美国医疗保健研究与质量局来自医疗办公室的医生参考数据相比,儿科DC似乎对患者安全持有更积极的态度和看法。未来的患者安全研究需要通过患者的直接反馈对安全绩效进行前瞻性评估,并将结果与这些自我评估的安全态度进行比较,同时进一步利用该调查为脊柱推拿提供者建立一个可比的数据库。