1. RO-ILS: Radiation Oncology Incident Learning System: A report from the first year of experience
- Author
-
Nadine L. Eads, David J. Hoopes, Tom Piotrowski, Adam P. Dicker, Gary A. Ezzell, Theresa M. Kwiatkowski, Gregory A. Patton, Eric C. Ford, Kathy Lash, Cindy Tomlinson, and Benedick A. Fraass
- Subjects
Safety Management ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Computer science ,MEDLINE ,Data science ,Formal system ,law.invention ,Patient safety ,Workflow ,Oncology ,law ,Radiation oncology ,Radiation Oncology ,medicine ,CLARITY ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Medical physics ,Safety culture ,Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Act - Abstract
Purpose Incident learning is a critical tool to improve patient safety. The Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Act of 2005 established essential legal protections to allow for the collection and analysis of medical incidents nationwide. Methods and materials Working with a federally listed patient safety organization (PSO), the American Society for Radiation Oncology and the American Association of Physicists in Medicine established RO-ILS: Radiation Oncology Incident Learning System (RO-ILS). This paper provides an overview of the RO-ILS background, development, structure, and workflow, as well as examples of preliminary data and lessons learned. RO-ILS is actively collecting, analyzing, and reporting patient safety events. Results As of February 24, 2015, 46 institutions have signed contracts with Clarity PSO, with 33 contracts pending. Of these, 27 sites have entered 739 patient safety events into local database space, with 358 events (48%) pushed to the national database. Conclusions To establish an optimal safety culture, radiation oncology departments should establish formal systems for incident learning that include participation in a nationwide incident learning program such as RO-ILS.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF