Abstract

BackgroundThe majority of patient contacts occur in general practice but general practice patient safety has been poorly described and under-researched to date compared to hospital settings. Our objective was to produce a set of patient safety tools and indicators that can be used in general practices in any healthcare setting and develop a ‘toolkit’ of feasible patient safety measures for general practices in England.MethodsA RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method exercise was conducted with a panel of international experts in general practice patient safety. Statements were developed from an extensive systematic literature review of patient safety in general practice. We used standard RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method rating methods to identify necessary items for assessing patient safety in general practice, framed in terms of the Structure-Process-Outcome taxonomy. Items were included in the toolkit if they received an overall panel median score of ≥7 with agreement (no more than two panel members rating the statement outside a 3-point distribution around the median).ResultsOf 205 identified statements, the panel rated 101 as necessary for assessing the safety of general practices. Of these 101 statements, 73 covered structures or organisational issues, 22 addressed processes and 6 focused on outcomes.ConclusionsWe developed and tested tools that can lead to interventions to improve safety outcomes in general practice. This paper reports the first attempt to systematically develop a patient safety toolkit for general practice, which has the potential to improve safety, cost effectiveness and patient experience, in any healthcare system.

Highlights

  • The majority of patient contacts occur in general practice but general practice patient safety has been poorly described and under-researched to date compared to hospital settings

  • In this paper we describe the development of a toolkit set of measures of general practice patient safety by using the RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method

  • It provides the first attempt at identifying tools and sets of indicators that are necessary for inclusion in a general practice patient safety toolkit in any healthcare setting worldwide, covering issues related to structure, processes and outcomes

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Summary

Introduction

The majority of patient contacts occur in general practice but general practice patient safety has been poorly described and under-researched to date compared to hospital settings. Our objective was to produce a set of patient safety tools and indicators that can be used in general practices in any healthcare setting and develop a ‘toolkit’ of feasible patient safety measures for general practices in England. Research on primary patient safety has lagged behind that of hospital care. One reason for this situation may be that general practice is thought of as inherently low-risk, so safety is not considered a critical problem. To improve safety in primary care settings, it is imperative to know what methods, tools and indicators are currently available to measure patient safety [7]

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