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灭火:一项定性研究,探索在三家学术医院利用患者投诉推动改进。

Putting out fires: a qualitative study exploring the use of patient complaints to drive improvement at three academic hospitals.

机构信息

Division of Internal Medicine, University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Centre for Quality Improvment and Patient Safety (C-QuIPS), University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

出版信息

BMJ Qual Saf. 2019 Nov;28(11):894-900. doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2018-008801. Epub 2019 May 23.

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES

Recent years have seen increasing calls for more proactive use of patient complaints to develop effective system-wide changes, analogous to the intended functions of incident reporting and root cause analysis (RCA) to improve patient safety. Given recent questions regarding the impact of RCAs on patient safety, we sought to explore the degree to which current patient complaints processes generate solutions to recurring quality problems.

DESIGN/SETTING: Qualitative analysis of semistructured interviews with 21 patient relations personnel (PRP), nursing and physician leaders at three teaching hospitals (Toronto, Canada).

RESULTS

Challenges to using the patient complaints process to drive hospital-wide improvement included: (1) Complaints often reflect recalcitrant system-wide issues (eg, wait times) or well-known problems which require intensive efforts to address (eg, poor communication). (2) The use of weak change strategies (eg, one-off educational sessions). (3) The handling of complaints by unit managers so they never reach the patient relations office. PRP identified giving patients a voice as their primary goal. Yet their daily work, which they described as 'putting out fires', focused primarily on placating patients in order to resolve complaints as quickly as possible, which may in effect suppress the patient voice.

CONCLUSIONS

Using patient complaints to drive improvement faces many of the challenges affecting incident reporting and RCA. The emphasis on 'putting out fires' may further detract from efforts to improve care for future patients. Systemically incorporating patients' voices in clinical operations, as with co-design and other forms of authentic patient engagement, may hold greater promise for meaningful improvements in the patient experience than do RCA-like analyses of patient complaints.

摘要

背景与目的

近年来,越来越多的人呼吁更积极地利用患者投诉来制定有效的全系统变革,类似于事件报告和根本原因分析(RCA)的预期功能,以提高患者安全性。鉴于最近对 RCA 对患者安全的影响提出了质疑,我们试图探讨当前患者投诉流程在多大程度上为反复出现的质量问题提供解决方案。

设计/设置:对加拿大多伦多三家教学医院的 21 名患者关系人员(PRP)、护理和医生领导进行半结构化访谈的定性分析。

结果

利用患者投诉流程推动医院全面改进面临的挑战包括:(1)投诉往往反映顽固的全系统问题(例如,等待时间)或需要密集努力解决的已知问题(例如,沟通不畅)。(2)使用弱变革策略(例如,一次性教育课程)。(3)单位经理处理投诉,使投诉永远不会到达患者关系办公室。PRP 将赋予患者发言权作为他们的主要目标。然而,他们的日常工作,他们称之为“灭火”,主要集中在安抚患者,以便尽快解决投诉,这实际上可能抑制了患者的声音。

结论

利用患者投诉来推动改进面临着影响事件报告和 RCA 的许多挑战。强调“灭火”可能会进一步削弱为未来患者改善护理的努力。在临床运营中系统地纳入患者的声音,例如共同设计和其他形式的真实患者参与,可能比 RCA 式的患者投诉分析更有希望为患者体验带来有意义的改善。

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