1 Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.
2 Bobby Alford Department of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA.
Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2018 Feb;158(2):273-279. doi: 10.1177/0194599817737993. Epub 2017 Oct 24.
Objective The objective is to describe variations in the otolaryngology morbidity and mortality (M&M) conference and to compare with other specialties. Design Cross-sectional survey. Setting The setting included otolaryngology departments across the United States and nonotolaryngology medical and surgical departments at 4 academic medical centers. Subjects and Methods Participants were members of a national otolaryngology quality/safety network and nonotolaryngology quality leaders at 4 large academic hospitals. Surveys were administered January 2017. Respondents described M&M conference practices, goals, and educational role. Results Twenty-eight of 39 individuals representing 28 institutions completed the otolaryngology survey (72% response rate). Of 197 individuals, 60 (30% response rate) representing 11 surgical and 20 nonsurgical specialties completed the comparison survey. Twenty-seven of 28 otolaryngologists (46 of 60 nonotolaryngologists) worked in academic settings. All otolaryngology programs conducted an M&M conference: 54% discussed all adverse events and errors; 32% used standard case selection processes; 70% used structured discussion, usually root cause analysis (64%); and 32% classified harm level. In comparison with other specialties, otolaryngology programs were more likely to discuss all adverse events and errors ( P = .01). Most conferences led to quality projects and intrainstitutional communication: 22% communicated to patients and families; 73% of respondents thought that M&M conferences should be standardized or use "best practices." In both surveys, improving patient care was rated the conference's most important function, followed by trainee education and culture change. Patient care and practice-based learning were rated the most relevant Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Core Competencies in both surveys. Conclusions Academic otolaryngology M&M practices generally align with other specialties, but specifics vary widely, making collaborative quality improvement challenging. Educational and administrative priorities cross specialties. Most respondents thought that standardization and best practices are worthwhile. Nonacademic practice data are needed.
描述耳鼻喉科发病率和死亡率(M&M)会议的变化,并与其他专业进行比较。
横断面调查。
包括美国各地的耳鼻喉科部门以及 4 家学术医疗中心的非耳鼻喉科医疗和外科部门。
参与者是国家耳鼻喉科质量/安全网络的成员和 4 家大型学术医院的非耳鼻喉科质量领导者。调查于 2017 年 1 月进行。受访者描述了 M&M 会议的实践、目标和教育作用。
代表 28 个机构的 28 名调查人员中的 28 名(72%的回复率)完成了耳鼻喉科调查。在 197 名代表 11 个外科和 20 个非外科专业的受访者中,有 60 名(30%的回复率)完成了比较调查。28 名耳鼻喉科医生中的 27 名(60 名非耳鼻喉科医生中的 46 名)在学术环境中工作。所有耳鼻喉科计划都进行了 M&M 会议:54%讨论了所有不良事件和错误;32%使用标准病例选择流程;70%使用结构化讨论,通常是根本原因分析(64%);32%对伤害级别进行分类。与其他专业相比,耳鼻喉科计划更有可能讨论所有不良事件和错误(P=.01)。大多数会议导致了质量项目和院内沟通:22%与患者和家属沟通;73%的受访者认为 M&M 会议应该标准化或使用“最佳实践”。在两项调查中,改善患者护理被评为会议最重要的功能,其次是学员教育和文化变革。在两项调查中,患者护理和基于实践的学习都被评为住院医师规范化培训核心能力最相关的项目。
学术耳鼻喉科 M&M 实践通常与其他专业一致,但具体细节差异很大,这使得合作进行质量改进具有挑战性。教育和管理重点跨越专业。大多数受访者认为标准化和最佳实践是值得的。需要非学术实践数据。