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When Safety Event Reporting Is Seen as Punitive: 'I've Been PSN-ed!'

Authors :
V Ramana, Feeser
Anne K, Jackson
Nastassia M, Savage
Timothy A, Layng
Regina K, Senn
Harinder S, Dhindsa
Sally A, Santen
Robin R, Hemphill
Source :
Annals of emergency medicine. 77(4)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Reporting systems are designed to identify patient care issues so changes can be made to improve safety. However, a culture of blame discourages event reporting, and reporting seen as punitive can inhibit individual and system performance in patient safety. This study aimed to determine the frequency and factors related to punitive patient safety event report submissions, referred to as Patient Safety Net reports, or PSNs.Three subject matter experts reviewed 513 PSNs submitted between January and June 2019. If the PSN was perceived as blaming an individual, it was coded as punitive. The experts had high agreement (κ=0.84 to 0.92), and identified relationships between PSN characteristics and punitive reporting were described.A total of 25% of PSNs were punitive, 7% were unclear, and 68% were designated nonpunitive. Punitive (vs nonpunitive) PSNs more likely focused on communication (41% vs 13%), employee behavior (38% vs 2%), and patient assessment issues (17% vs 4%). Nonpunitive (vs punitive) PSNs were more likely for equipment (19% vs 4%) and patient or family behavior issues (8% vs 2%). Punitive (vs nonpunitive) PSNs were more common with adverse reactions or complications (21% vs 10%), communication failures (25% vs 16%), and noncategorized events (19% vs 8%), and nonpunitive (vs punitive) PSNs were more frequent in falls (5% vs 0%) and radiology or laboratory events (17% vs 7%).Punitive reports have important implications for reporting systems because they may reflect a culture of blame and a failure to recognize system influences on behaviors. Nonpunitive wording better identifies factors contributing to safety concerns. Reporting systems should focus on patient outcomes and learning from systems issues, not blaming individuals.

Details

ISSN :
10976760
Volume :
77
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of emergency medicine
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........2d3b5c76c44f962d0a6c5ebb52d8cc0b