Poghosyan Lusine, Norful Allison A, Fleck Elaine, Bruzzese Jean-Marie, Talsma AkkeNeel, Nannini Angela
From the Center for Health Policy, Columbia University School of Nursing, New York, NY (LP, AAN, J-MB); New York Presbyterian Hospital: Ambulatory Care Network, New York (EF); University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI (AT); University of Massachusetts-Lowell, Lowell, MA (AN).
J Am Board Fam Med. 2017 Nov-Dec;30(6):733-742. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2017.06.170161.
Despite recent focus on patient safety in primary care, little attention has been paid to errors of omission, which represent significant gaps in care and threaten patient safety in primary care but are not well studied or categorized. The purpose of this study was to develop a typology of errors of omission from the perspectives of primary care providers (PCPs) and understand what factors within practices lead to or prevent these omissions.
A qualitative descriptive design was used to collect data from 26 PCPs, both physicians and nurse practitioners, from the New York State through individual interviews. One researcher conducted all interviews, which were audiotaped, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed in ATLAS.ti, Berlin by 3 researchers using content analysis. They immersed themselves into data, read transcripts independently, and conducted inductive coding. The final codes were linked to each other to develop the typology of errors of omission and the themes. Data saturation was reached at the 26th interview.
PCPs reported that omitting patient teaching, patient followup, emotional support, and addressing mental health needs were the main categories of errors of omission. PCPs perceived that time constraints, unplanned patient visits and emergencies, and administrative burden led to these gaps in care. They emphasized that organizational support and infrastructure, effective teamwork and communication, and preparation for the patient encounter were important safeguards to prevent errors of omission within their practices.
Errors of omission are common in primary care and could threaten patient safety. Efforts to eliminate them should focus on strengthening organizational attributes of practices, improving teamwork and communication, and assigning manageable workload to PCPs.
Practice and policy change is necessary to address gaps in care and prevent them before they result in patient harm.
尽管近期初级医疗保健领域聚焦于患者安全,但对漏诊失误却鲜有关注。漏诊失误代表着医疗服务中的重大缺口,威胁着初级医疗保健中的患者安全,但却未得到充分研究或分类。本研究的目的是从初级医疗保健提供者(PCP)的角度制定漏诊失误的类型,并了解医疗实践中的哪些因素会导致或预防这些漏诊。
采用定性描述性设计,通过个人访谈从纽约州的26名PCP(包括医生和执业护士)收集数据。由一名研究人员进行所有访谈,访谈进行录音、逐字转录,并由3名研究人员在柏林的ATLAS.ti软件中使用内容分析法进行分析。他们深入研究数据,独立阅读转录本,并进行归纳编码。将最终编码相互关联,以形成漏诊失误的类型和主题。在第26次访谈时达到数据饱和。
PCP报告称,遗漏患者教育、患者随访、情感支持以及满足心理健康需求是漏诊失误的主要类别。PCP认为时间限制、意外的患者就诊和紧急情况以及行政负担导致了这些医疗缺口。他们强调组织支持和基础设施、有效的团队合作与沟通以及为患者诊疗做准备是防止其医疗实践中漏诊失误的重要保障。
漏诊失误在初级医疗保健中很常见,可能威胁患者安全。消除这些失误的努力应集中在加强医疗实践的组织属性、改善团队合作与沟通以及为PCP分配可管理的工作量上。
为解决医疗服务中的缺口并在其导致患者伤害之前加以预防,实践和政策变革是必要的。