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Pediatric immunization-related safety incidents in primary care: A mixed methods analysis of a national database

BACKGROUND: Children are scheduled to receive 18–20 immunizations before their 18th birthday in England and Wales; this approximates to 13 million vaccines administered per annum. Each immunization represents a potential opportunity for immunization-related error and effective immunization is impera...

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Autores principales: Rees, Philippa, Edwards, Adrian, Powell, Colin, Evans, Huw Prosser, Carter, Ben, Hibbert, Peter, Makeham, Meredith, Sheikh, Aziz, Donaldson, Liam, Carson-Stevens, Andrew
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4518472/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26122580
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.06.068
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author Rees, Philippa
Edwards, Adrian
Powell, Colin
Evans, Huw Prosser
Carter, Ben
Hibbert, Peter
Makeham, Meredith
Sheikh, Aziz
Donaldson, Liam
Carson-Stevens, Andrew
author_facet Rees, Philippa
Edwards, Adrian
Powell, Colin
Evans, Huw Prosser
Carter, Ben
Hibbert, Peter
Makeham, Meredith
Sheikh, Aziz
Donaldson, Liam
Carson-Stevens, Andrew
author_sort Rees, Philippa
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Children are scheduled to receive 18–20 immunizations before their 18th birthday in England and Wales; this approximates to 13 million vaccines administered per annum. Each immunization represents a potential opportunity for immunization-related error and effective immunization is imperative to maintain the public health benefit from immunization. Using data from a national reporting system, this study aimed to characterize pediatric immunization-related safety incident reports from primary care in England and Wales between 2002 and 2013. METHODS: A cross-sectional mixed methods study was undertaken. This comprised reading the free-text of incident reports and applying codes to describe incident type, potential contributory factors, harm severity, and incident outcomes. A subsequent thematic analysis was undertaken to interpret the most commonly occurring codes, such as those describing the incident, events leading up to it and reported contributory factors, within the contexts they were described. RESULTS: We identified 1745 reports and most (n = 1077, 61.7%) described harm outcomes including three deaths, 67 reports of moderate harm and 1007 reports of low harm. Failure of timely vaccination was the potential cause of three child deaths from meningitis and pneumonia, and described in a further 113 reports. Vaccine administration incidents included the wrong number of doses (n = 476, 27.3%), wrong timing (n = 294, 16.8%), and wrong vaccine (n = 249, 14.3%). Documentation failures were frequently implicated. Socially and medically vulnerable children were commonly described. CONCLUSION: This is the largest examination of reported contributory factors for immunization-related patient safety incidents in children. Our findings suggest investments in IT infrastructure to support data linkage and identification of risk predictors, development of consultation models that promote the role of parents in mitigating safety incidents, and improvement efforts to adapt and adopt best practices from elsewhere, are needed to mitigate future immunization-related patient safety incidents. These priorities are particularly pressing for vulnerable patient groups.
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spelling pubmed-45184722015-08-01 Pediatric immunization-related safety incidents in primary care: A mixed methods analysis of a national database Rees, Philippa Edwards, Adrian Powell, Colin Evans, Huw Prosser Carter, Ben Hibbert, Peter Makeham, Meredith Sheikh, Aziz Donaldson, Liam Carson-Stevens, Andrew Vaccine Article BACKGROUND: Children are scheduled to receive 18–20 immunizations before their 18th birthday in England and Wales; this approximates to 13 million vaccines administered per annum. Each immunization represents a potential opportunity for immunization-related error and effective immunization is imperative to maintain the public health benefit from immunization. Using data from a national reporting system, this study aimed to characterize pediatric immunization-related safety incident reports from primary care in England and Wales between 2002 and 2013. METHODS: A cross-sectional mixed methods study was undertaken. This comprised reading the free-text of incident reports and applying codes to describe incident type, potential contributory factors, harm severity, and incident outcomes. A subsequent thematic analysis was undertaken to interpret the most commonly occurring codes, such as those describing the incident, events leading up to it and reported contributory factors, within the contexts they were described. RESULTS: We identified 1745 reports and most (n = 1077, 61.7%) described harm outcomes including three deaths, 67 reports of moderate harm and 1007 reports of low harm. Failure of timely vaccination was the potential cause of three child deaths from meningitis and pneumonia, and described in a further 113 reports. Vaccine administration incidents included the wrong number of doses (n = 476, 27.3%), wrong timing (n = 294, 16.8%), and wrong vaccine (n = 249, 14.3%). Documentation failures were frequently implicated. Socially and medically vulnerable children were commonly described. CONCLUSION: This is the largest examination of reported contributory factors for immunization-related patient safety incidents in children. Our findings suggest investments in IT infrastructure to support data linkage and identification of risk predictors, development of consultation models that promote the role of parents in mitigating safety incidents, and improvement efforts to adapt and adopt best practices from elsewhere, are needed to mitigate future immunization-related patient safety incidents. These priorities are particularly pressing for vulnerable patient groups. Elsevier Science 2015-07-31 /pmc/articles/PMC4518472/ /pubmed/26122580 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.06.068 Text en © 2015 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Rees, Philippa
Edwards, Adrian
Powell, Colin
Evans, Huw Prosser
Carter, Ben
Hibbert, Peter
Makeham, Meredith
Sheikh, Aziz
Donaldson, Liam
Carson-Stevens, Andrew
Pediatric immunization-related safety incidents in primary care: A mixed methods analysis of a national database
title Pediatric immunization-related safety incidents in primary care: A mixed methods analysis of a national database
title_full Pediatric immunization-related safety incidents in primary care: A mixed methods analysis of a national database
title_fullStr Pediatric immunization-related safety incidents in primary care: A mixed methods analysis of a national database
title_full_unstemmed Pediatric immunization-related safety incidents in primary care: A mixed methods analysis of a national database
title_short Pediatric immunization-related safety incidents in primary care: A mixed methods analysis of a national database
title_sort pediatric immunization-related safety incidents in primary care: a mixed methods analysis of a national database
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4518472/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26122580
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.06.068
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