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Description and Yield of Current Quality and Safety Review in Selected US Academic Emergency Departments
- Source :
- Journal of patient safety. 16(4)
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- OBJECTIVES Quality and safety review for performance improvement is important for systems of care and is required for US academic emergency departments (EDs). Assessment of the impact of patient safety initiatives in the context of increasing burdens of quality measurement compels standardized, meaningful, high-yield approaches for performance review. Limited data describe how quality and safety reviews are currently conducted and how well they perform in detecting patient harm and areas for improvement. We hypothesized that decades-old approaches used in many academic EDs are inefficient and low yield for identifying patient harm. METHODS We conducted a prospective observational study to evaluate the efficiency and yield of current quality review processes at five academic EDs for a 12-month period. Sites provided descriptions of their current practice and collected summary data on the number and severity of events identified in their reviews and the referral sources that led to their capture. Categories of common referral sources were established at the beginning of the study. Sites used the Institute for Healthcare Improvement's definition in defining an adverse event and a modified National Coordinating Council for Medication Error Reporting and Prevention (MERP) Index for grading severity of events. RESULTS Participating sites had similar processes for quality review, including a two-level review process, monthly reviews and conferences, similar screening criteria, and a grading system for evaluating cases. In 60 months of data collection, we reviewed a total of 4735 cases and identified 381 events. This included 287 near-misses, errors/events (MERP A-I) and 94 adverse events (AEs) (MERP E-I). The overall AE rate (event rate with harm) was 1.99 (95% confidence interval = 1.62%-2.43%), ranging from 1.24% to 3.47% across sites. The overall rate of quality concerns (events without harm) was 6.06% (5.42%-6.78%), ranging from 2.96% to 10.95% across sites. Seventy-two-hour returns were the most frequent referral source used, accounting for 47% of the cases reviewed but with a yield of only 0.81% in identifying harm. Other referral sources similarly had very low yields. External referrals were the highest yield referral source, with 14.34% (10.64%-19.03%) identifying AEs. As a percentage of the 94 AEs identified, external referrals also accounted for 41.49% of cases. CONCLUSIONS With an overall adverse event rate of 1.99%, commonly used referral sources seem to be low yield and inefficient for detecting patient harm. Approximately 6% of the cases identified by these criteria yielded a near miss or quality concern. New approaches to quality and safety review in the ED are needed to optimize their yield and efficiency for identifying harm and areas for improvement.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Referral
Leadership and Management
Near miss
03 medical and health sciences
Patient safety
0302 clinical medicine
Health care
medicine
Humans
030212 general & internal medicine
Prospective Studies
Grading (education)
Quality of Health Care
Data collection
business.industry
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
030208 emergency & critical care medicine
medicine.disease
United States
Harm
Emergency medicine
Observational study
Medical emergency
Patient Safety
business
Emergency Service, Hospital
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15498425
- Volume :
- 16
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of patient safety
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e7ad50b3c9d2c8581d505b18fce0fd4b