Lessios Anna Sophia, Vilendrer Stacie, Peterson Ashley, Brown-Johnson Cati, Kling Samantha M R, Veruttipong Darlene, Arteaga Michelle, Gessner Daniel, Gostic William John
Medicine, Primary Care and Population Health Division, Evaluation Sciences Unit, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA
Medicine, Primary Care and Population Health Division, Evaluation Sciences Unit, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA.
BMJ Open Qual. 2024 Jul 31;13(3):e002806. doi: 10.1136/bmjoq-2024-002806.
Incident reporting systems (IRS) can improve care quality and patient safety, yet their impact is limited by clinician engagement. Our objective was to assess barriers to reporting in a hospital-wide IRS and use data to inform ongoing improvement of a specialty-specific IRS embedded in the electronic health record targeting anaesthesiologists.
This quality improvement (QI) evaluation used mixed methods, including qualitative interviews, faculty surveys and user data from the specialty-specific IRS. We conducted 24 semi-structured interviews from January to May 2023 in a large academic health system in Northern California. Participants included adult and paediatric anaesthesiologists, operating room nurses, surgeons and QI operators, recruited through convenience and snowball sampling. We identified key themes and factors influencing engagement, which were classified using the Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety framework. We surveyed hospital anaesthesiologists in January and May 2023, and characterised the quantity and type of reports submitted to the new system.
Participants shared organisation and technology-related barriers to engagement in traditional system-wide IRSs, many of which the specialty-specific IRS addressed-specifically those related to technological access to the system. Barriers related to building psychological safety for those who report remain. Survey results showed that most barriers to reporting improved following the specialty-specific IRS launch, but limited time remained an ongoing barrier (25 respondents out of 44, 56.8%). A total of 964 reports with quality/safety concerns were submitted over the first 8 months of implementation; 47-76 unique anaesthesiologists engaged per month. The top safety quality categories of concern were equipment and technology (25.9%), clinical complications (25.3%) and communication and scheduling (19.9%).
These findings suggest that a specialty-specific IRS can facilitate increased physician engagement in quality and safety reporting and complement existing system-wide IRSs.
事件报告系统(IRS)可提高医疗质量和患者安全,但其影响因临床医生的参与度而受限。我们的目标是评估全院范围内IRS报告的障碍,并利用数据为嵌入电子健康记录中的针对麻醉医生的专科特定IRS的持续改进提供信息。
这项质量改进(QI)评估采用了混合方法,包括定性访谈、教员调查以及来自专科特定IRS的用户数据。2023年1月至5月,我们在北加利福尼亚的一个大型学术医疗系统中进行了24次半结构化访谈。参与者包括成人和儿科麻醉医生、手术室护士、外科医生和QI操作人员,通过便利抽样和滚雪球抽样招募。我们确定了影响参与度的关键主题和因素,并使用患者安全系统工程倡议框架进行分类。我们在2023年1月和5月对医院麻醉医生进行了调查,并对提交给新系统的报告数量和类型进行了描述。
参与者分享了参与传统全院范围IRS的组织和技术相关障碍,其中许多障碍专科特定IRS已解决,特别是那些与系统技术访问相关的障碍。与为报告者建立心理安全相关的障碍仍然存在。调查结果显示,在专科特定IRS推出后,大多数报告障碍有所改善,但时间有限仍然是一个持续存在的障碍(44名受访者中有25名,占56.8%)。在实施的前8个月共提交了964份有质量/安全问题的报告;每月有47 - 76名不同的麻醉医生参与。关注的首要安全质量类别是设备和技术(25.9%)、临床并发症(25.3%)以及沟通和排班(19.9%)。
这些发现表明,专科特定IRS可促进医生更多地参与质量和安全报告,并补充现有的全院范围IRS。