Abstract

Background and purposeIncident learning can reveal important opportunities for safety improvement, yet learning from error is challenged by a number of human factors. In this study, incident learning reports have been analyzed with the human factors analysis classification system (HFACS) to uncover predictive patterns of human contributing factors.Materials and methodsSixteen hundred reports from the Safety in Radiation Oncology incident learning system were filtered for inclusion ultimately yielding 141 reports. A radiotherapy‐specific error type was assigned to each event as were all reported human contributing factors. An analysis of associations between human contributing factors and error types was performed.ResultsMultiple associations between human factors were found. Relationships between leadership and risk were demonstrated with supervision failures. Skill‐based errors (those done without much thought while performing familiar tasks) were found to pose a significant safety risk to the treatment planning process. Errors made during quality assurance (QA) activities were associated with decision‐based errors which indicate lacking knowledge or skills.ConclusionAn application of the HFACS to incident learning reports revealed relationships between human contributing factors and radiotherapy errors. Safety improvement efforts should include supervisory influences as they affect risk and error. An association between skill‐based and treatment planning errors showed a need for more mindfulness in this increasingly automated process. An association between decision and QA errors revealed a need for improved education in this area. These and other findings can be used to strategically advance safety.

Highlights

  • Background to the Problem Harm asPart of MedicineThe most basic principles of medical ethics include nonmaleficence, which is the obligation of medical providers to refrain from intentionally harming their patients

  • While radiation is effective at damaging cancer cells, it is toxic to healthy organs and tissues that are exposed as part of treatment

  • These voluntarily submitted reports showed information about radiotherapy errors yet contained some amount of inherent bias; contributions were offered through self-selection sampling

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Summary

Introduction

The most basic principles of medical ethics include nonmaleficence, which is the obligation of medical providers to refrain from intentionally harming their patients. They include beneficence or the requirement that providers act in the best interests of their patients’ health and well-being (Emanuel et al, 2008). Despite these basic priorities and intentions, patients are still being harmed.

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