Abstract

IntroductionHealthcare systems often expose patients to significant, preventable harm causing an estimated 44,000 to 98,000 deaths or more annually. This has propelled patient safety to the forefront, with reporting systems allowing for the review of local events to determine their root causes. As residents engage in a substantial amount of patient care in academic emergency departments, it is critical to use these safety event reports for resident-focused interventions and educational initiatives. This study analyzes reports from the Virginia Commonwealth University Health System to understand how the reports are categorized and how it relates to opportunities for resident education.MethodsIdentifying categories from the literature, three subject matter experts (attending physician, nursing director, registered nurse) categorized an initial 20 reports to resolve category gaps and then 100 reports to determine inter-rater reliability. Given sufficient agreement, the remaining 400 reports were coded individually for type of event and education among other categories.ResultsAfter reviewing 513 events, we found that the most common event types were issues related to staff and resident training (25%) and communication (18%), with 31% requiring no education, 46% requiring directed educational feedback to an individual or group, 20% requiring education through monthly safety updates or meetings, 3% requiring urgent communication by email or in-person, and <1% requiring simulation.ConclusionTwenty years after the publication of To Err is Human, gains have been made integrating quality assurance and patient safety within medical education and hospital systems, but there remains extensive work to be done. Through a review and analysis of our patient safety event reporting system, we were able to gain a better understanding of the events that are submitted, including the types of events and their severity, and how these relate to the types of educational interventions provided (eg, feedback, simulation). We also determined that these events can help inform resident education and learning using various types of education. Additionally, incorporating residents in the review process, such as through root cause analyses, can provide residents with high-quality, engaging learning opportunities and useful, lifelong skills, which is invaluable to our learners and future physicians.

Highlights

  • Healthcare systems often expose patients to significant, preventable harm causing an estimated 44,000 to 98,000 deaths or more annually

  • Through a review and analysis of our patient safety event reporting system, we were able to gain a better understanding of the events that are submitted, including the types of events and their severity, and how these relate to the types of educational interventions provided

  • All patient safety net reports (PSN) were categorized by the type of action that should be taken in response to the reported safety event

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Summary

Introduction

Healthcare systems often expose patients to significant, preventable harm causing an estimated 44,000 to 98,000 deaths or more annually. Healthcare systems often expose patients to significant, preventable harm on par with other chronic medical conditions at rates estimated between 44,000 and 98,000 deaths annually,[1] some suggest it may be even higher.[2] These reports have highlighted the importance of patient safety and safety event reporting. These reporting systems allow for local review of events and identification of whether they are local issues or a system-level vulnerability.[3,4] Aligned with efforts to identify such errors, research is beginning to focus on how we learn from the reported events. Pronovost et al concluded that reporting systems alone were “insufficient to gain the knowledge needed to learn how [patient safety report systems] can improve patient safety.”[10,11] It must include the establishment of organizational leadership and safety champions to spearhead learning from events.[12]

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