Abstract

The use of health information technology (IT) is rapidly increasing to support improvements in the delivery of care. Although health IT is delivering huge benefits, new technology can also introduce unique risks. Despite these risks, evidence on the preventability and effects of health IT failures on patients is scarce. In our study we therefore sought to evaluate the preventability and effects of health IT failures by examining patient safety incidents in England and Wales. We designed our study as a retrospective analysis of 10 years of incident reporting in England and Wales. We used text mining with the words "computer", "system", "workstation", and "network" to explore free-text incident descriptors to identify incidents related to health IT failures following a previously described approach. We then applied an n-gram model of searching to identify contiguous sequences of words and provide spatial context. We examined incident details, recorded harm, and preventability. Standard descriptive statistics were applied. Degree of harm was identified according to standardised definitions and preventability was assessed by two independent reviewers. We identified 2627 incidents related to health IT failures. 2557 (97%) of 2627 incidents were assessed for harm (70 incidents were excluded). 2106 (82%) of 2557 health IT failures caused no harm to patients, 331 (13%) caused low harm, 102 (4%) caused moderate harm, 14 (1%) caused severe harm, and four (<1%) contributed to the death of a patient. 1964 (75%) of 2627 incidents were deemed to be preventable. Health IT is fundamental to the delivery of high-quality care, yet there is a poor understanding of the effects of IT failures on patient safety and whether they can be prevented. Failures are complex and involve interlinked aspects of technology, people, and the environment. Health IT failures are undoubtedly a potential source of substantial harm, but they are likely to be under-reported. Worryingly, three-quarters of IT failures are potentially preventable. There is a need to see health IT as a fundamental tenet of patient safety, develop better methods for capturing the effects of IT failures on patients, and adopt simple measures to reduce their probability and mitigate their risk. The National Institutes of Health Research Imperial Patient Safety Translational Research Centre at Imperial College London.

Highlights

  • Adverse events leading to unintended harm or injury affect around 3–23% of patients, contribute to 3·6% of avoidable in-hospital deaths,[1,2,3,4,5] and are subject to both mandatory and voluntary reporting at local and national levels

  • We identified 2627 incidents related to health information technology (IT) failures. 2557 (97%) of 2627 incidents were assessed for harm (70 incidents were excluded). 2106 (82%) of 2557 health IT failures caused no harm to patients, 331 (13%) caused low harm, 102 (4%) caused moderate harm, 14 (1%) caused severe harm, and four (

  • Interpretation Health IT is fundamental to the delivery of high-quality care, yet there is a poor understanding of the effects of IT failures on patient safety and whether they can be prevented

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Adverse events leading to unintended harm or injury affect around 3–23% of patients, contribute to 3·6% of avoidable in-hospital deaths,[1,2,3,4,5] and are subject to both mandatory and voluntary reporting at local and national levels. A unified and open approach to reporting such events is crucial to improving the quality and safety of health care.[6,7] In England and Wales, the National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS) was established in 2003; the NRLS is the largest and most comprehensive patient safety reporting system in the world, with more than 18 million incident reports captured since its inception.[8] This voluntary system collects anonymised patient safety incidents, defined as “any unintended or unexpected incident that could have or did lead to harm to one or more patients receiving NHS-funded healthcare”, from local health-care organisations in England and Wales and acts to identify safety concerns and provide evidence for key safety alerts at a national level.[9]. Health IT www.thelancet.com/digital-health Vol 1 July 2019

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call