Carr S, Mukherjee T, Montgomery A, Durbridge M, Tarrant C
Department of Clinical Education, University Hospitals of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
University Hospitals of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
Pilot Feasibility Stud. 2016 Sep 29;2:60. doi: 10.1186/s40814-016-0100-0.
Junior doctors often have concerns about quality and safety but show low levels of engagement with incident reporting systems. We aimed to develop and pilot a web-based reporting tool for junior doctors to proactively report concerns about quality and safety of care, and optimise it for future use.
We developed the gripes tool with input from junior doctors and piloted it at a large UK teaching hospital trust. We evaluated the tool through an analysis of concerns reported over a 3-month pilot period, and through interviews with five stakeholders and two focus groups with medical students and junior doctors about their views of the tool.
Junior doctors reported 111 concerns during piloting, including a number of problems previously unknown to the trust. Junior doctors felt the tool was easy to use and encouraged them to report. Barriers to engagement included lack of motivation of junior doctors to report concerns, and fear of repercussions. Ensuring transparency about who would see reported concerns, and providing feedback across whole cohorts of junior doctors about concerns raised and how these had been addressed to improve patient safety at the trust, were seen having the potential to mitigate against these barriers. Sustainability of the tool was seen as requiring a revised model of staffing to share the load for responding to concerns and ongoing efforts to integrate the tool and data with other local systems for gathering intelligence about risks and incidents. Following piloting the trust committed to continuing to operate the gripes tool on an ongoing basis.
The gripes tool has the potential to enable trusts to proactively monitor and address risks to patient safety, but sustainability is likely to be dependent on organisational commitment to staffing the system and perceptions of added value over the longer term.
初级医生常常对医疗质量和安全有所担忧,但他们对事件报告系统的参与度较低。我们旨在开发并试行一款基于网络的报告工具,供初级医生主动报告对医疗质量和安全的担忧,并对其进行优化以便未来使用。
我们在初级医生的参与下开发了抱怨工具,并在英国一家大型教学医院信托机构进行了试行。我们通过分析试行期三个月内报告的担忧、与五名利益相关者进行访谈以及与医学生和初级医生进行两个焦点小组讨论,来评估该工具。
初级医生在试行期间报告了111项担忧,包括一些该信托机构之前未知的问题。初级医生认为该工具易于使用,并鼓励他们进行报告。参与的障碍包括初级医生缺乏报告担忧的动力以及害怕受到影响。确保对谁会看到报告的担忧保持透明,并向全体初级医生反馈所提出的担忧以及这些担忧是如何得到解决以提高该信托机构的患者安全的,被认为有可能减轻这些障碍。该工具的可持续性被视为需要修订人员配置模式以分担应对担忧的负担,并持续努力将该工具和数据与其他本地系统集成,以收集有关风险和事件的情报。试行之后,该信托机构承诺继续持续运营抱怨工具。
抱怨工具有可能使信托机构能够主动监测并应对患者安全风险,但可持续性可能取决于组织对该系统人员配置的承诺以及对长期附加值的认知。