Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington; Department of Radiation Medicine, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Oregon.
Anchorage & Valley Radiation Therapy Center, Anchorage, Alaska.
Pract Radiat Oncol. 2019 Jul-Aug;9(4):e407-e416. doi: 10.1016/j.prro.2019.02.004. Epub 2019 Feb 28.
Incident learning systems (ILSs) require substantial time and effort to maintain, risking staff burnout and ILS disuse. Herein, we assess the durability of ILS-associated safety culture improvements and ILS engagement at 5 years.
A validated survey assessing safety culture was administered to all staff of an academic radiation oncology department before starting ILS and annually thereafter for 5 years. The survey consists of 70 questions assessing key cultural domains, overall patient safety grade, and barriers to incident reporting. A χ test was used to compare baseline scores before starting the ILS (pre-ILS) with the aggregate 5 years during which ILS was in use (with ILS). ILS engagement was measured by the self-reported number of ILS entries submitted in the previous 12 months.
The survey response rate was ≥68% each year (range, 68%-80%). High-volume event reporting was sustained (4673 reports; average of 0.9 ILS entries per treatment course). ILS engagement increased, with 43% of respondents submitting reports during the 12 months pre-ILS compared with 64% with ILS in use (P < .001). Significant improvements (pre- vs. with-ILS) were observed in the cultural domains of patient safety perceptions (25% vs 39%; P < .03), and responsibility and self-efficacy (43% vs 60%; P < .01). The overall patient safety grade of very good or excellent significantly increased (69% vs 85%; P < .01). Significant reductions were seen in the following barriers to error reporting: embarrassment in front of colleagues, getting colleagues into trouble, and effect on department reputation.
Comprehensive incident learning was sustained over 5 years and is associated with significant durable improvements in metrics of patient safety culture.
事件学习系统(ILS)需要大量的时间和精力来维护,这有可能导致员工倦怠和 ILS 停用。在此,我们评估了 ILS 相关安全文化改善和 ILS 参与度在 5 年后的持久性。
我们向一家学术放射肿瘤学部门的所有员工发放了一份经过验证的评估安全文化的调查问卷,在开始使用 ILS 之前和之后的每年进行一次,共进行了 5 年。该调查包括 70 个问题,评估了关键文化领域、整体患者安全等级和事件报告障碍。使用 χ 检验比较了在开始使用 ILS 之前(ILS 前)的基线分数与使用 ILS 的 5 年期间的总分数(ILS 期间)。ILS 参与度通过自我报告的过去 12 个月内提交的 ILS 条目数量来衡量。
每年的调查回复率均≥68%(范围为 68%-80%)。高容量的事件报告得以维持(4673 份报告;平均每个治疗疗程有 0.9 份 ILS 条目)。ILS 参与度增加,ILS 前的 12 个月内有 43%的受访者提交报告,而使用 ILS 时为 64%(P<.001)。在患者安全感知(25%对 39%;P<.03)和责任与自我效能感(43%对 60%;P<.01)等文化领域观察到显著改善。非常好或优秀的整体患者安全等级显著增加(69%对 85%;P<.01)。在以下错误报告障碍方面观察到显著减少:在同事面前尴尬、给同事带来麻烦和对部门声誉的影响。
全面的事件学习持续了 5 年以上,并与患者安全文化的各项指标的显著持久改善相关。