Mitchell Cody, Butler Logan, Holloway Alexa D, Ra Jin H, Adapa Karthik, Greenberg Caprice, Marks Lawrence B, Ivester Thomas, Mazur Lukasz
Division of Healthcare Engineering, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, United States.
Division of Acute Care Surgery, Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, United States.
Front Health Serv. 2024 Apr 2;4:1337840. doi: 10.3389/frhs.2024.1337840. eCollection 2024.
Given the persistent safety incidents in operating rooms (ORs) nationwide (approx. 4,000 preventable harmful surgical errors per year), there is a need to better analyze and understand reported patient safety events. This study describes the results of applying the Team Strategies and Tools to Enhance Performance and Patient Safety (TeamSTEPPS) supported by the Teamwork Evaluation of Non-Technical Skills (TENTS) instrument to analyze patient safety event reports at one large academic medical center. Results suggest that suboptimal behaviors stemming from poor communication, lack of situation monitoring, and inappropriate task prioritization and execution were implicated in most reported events. Our proposed methodology offers an effective way of programmatically sorting and prioritizing patient safety improvement efforts.
鉴于全国手术室持续发生安全事件(每年约有4000起可预防的有害手术失误),有必要更好地分析和理解所报告的患者安全事件。本研究描述了应用由非技术技能团队合作评估(TENTS)工具支持的团队策略和工具以提高绩效和患者安全(TeamSTEPPS)来分析一家大型学术医疗中心患者安全事件报告的结果。结果表明,沟通不畅、缺乏情况监测以及任务优先级和执行不当所导致的次优行为在大多数报告事件中都有牵连。我们提出的方法为以编程方式对患者安全改进工作进行分类和排序提供了一种有效方法。