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Patient Safety Incidents Involving Sick Children in Primary Care in England and Wales: A Mixed Methods Analysis

BACKGROUND: The UK performs poorly relative to other economically developed countries on numerous indicators of care quality for children. The contribution of iatrogenic harm to these outcomes is unclear. As primary care is the first point of healthcare contact for most children, we sought to invest...

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Autores principales: Rees, Philippa, Edwards, Adrian, Powell, Colin, Hibbert, Peter, Williams, Huw, Makeham, Meredith, Carter, Ben, Luff, Donna, Parry, Gareth, Avery, Anthony, Sheikh, Aziz, Donaldson, Liam, Carson-Stevens, Andrew
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5240916/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28095408
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002217
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author Rees, Philippa
Edwards, Adrian
Powell, Colin
Hibbert, Peter
Williams, Huw
Makeham, Meredith
Carter, Ben
Luff, Donna
Parry, Gareth
Avery, Anthony
Sheikh, Aziz
Donaldson, Liam
Carson-Stevens, Andrew
author_facet Rees, Philippa
Edwards, Adrian
Powell, Colin
Hibbert, Peter
Williams, Huw
Makeham, Meredith
Carter, Ben
Luff, Donna
Parry, Gareth
Avery, Anthony
Sheikh, Aziz
Donaldson, Liam
Carson-Stevens, Andrew
author_sort Rees, Philippa
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The UK performs poorly relative to other economically developed countries on numerous indicators of care quality for children. The contribution of iatrogenic harm to these outcomes is unclear. As primary care is the first point of healthcare contact for most children, we sought to investigate the safety of care provided to children in this setting. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We undertook a mixed methods investigation of reports of primary care patient safety incidents involving sick children from England and Wales’ National Reporting and Learning System between 1 January 2005 and 1 December 2013. Two reviewers independently selected relevant incident reports meeting prespecified criteria, and then descriptively analyzed these reports to identify the most frequent and harmful incident types. This was followed by an in-depth thematic analysis of a purposive sample of reports to understand the reasons underpinning incidents. Key candidate areas for strengthening primary care provision and reducing the risks of systems failures were then identified through multidisciplinary discussions. Of 2,191 safety incidents identified from 2,178 reports, 30% (n = 658) were harmful, including 12 deaths and 41 cases of severe harm. The children involved in these incidents had respiratory conditions (n = 387; 18%), injuries (n = 289; 13%), nonspecific signs and symptoms, e.g., fever (n = 281; 13%), and gastrointestinal or genitourinary conditions (n = 268; 12%), among others. Priority areas for improvement included safer systems for medication provision in community pharmacies; triage processes to enable effective and timely assessment, diagnosis, and referral of acutely sick children attending out-of-hours services; and enhanced communication for robust safety netting between professionals and parents. The main limitations of this study result from underreporting of safety incidents and variable data quality. Our findings therefore require further exploration in longitudinal studies utilizing case review methods. CONCLUSIONS: This study highlights opportunities to reduce iatrogenic harm and avoidable child deaths. Globally, healthcare systems with primary-care-led models of delivery must now examine their existing practices to determine the prevalence and burden of these priority safety issues, and utilize improvement methods to achieve sustainable improvements in care quality.
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spelling pubmed-52409162017-02-06 Patient Safety Incidents Involving Sick Children in Primary Care in England and Wales: A Mixed Methods Analysis Rees, Philippa Edwards, Adrian Powell, Colin Hibbert, Peter Williams, Huw Makeham, Meredith Carter, Ben Luff, Donna Parry, Gareth Avery, Anthony Sheikh, Aziz Donaldson, Liam Carson-Stevens, Andrew PLoS Med Research Article BACKGROUND: The UK performs poorly relative to other economically developed countries on numerous indicators of care quality for children. The contribution of iatrogenic harm to these outcomes is unclear. As primary care is the first point of healthcare contact for most children, we sought to investigate the safety of care provided to children in this setting. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We undertook a mixed methods investigation of reports of primary care patient safety incidents involving sick children from England and Wales’ National Reporting and Learning System between 1 January 2005 and 1 December 2013. Two reviewers independently selected relevant incident reports meeting prespecified criteria, and then descriptively analyzed these reports to identify the most frequent and harmful incident types. This was followed by an in-depth thematic analysis of a purposive sample of reports to understand the reasons underpinning incidents. Key candidate areas for strengthening primary care provision and reducing the risks of systems failures were then identified through multidisciplinary discussions. Of 2,191 safety incidents identified from 2,178 reports, 30% (n = 658) were harmful, including 12 deaths and 41 cases of severe harm. The children involved in these incidents had respiratory conditions (n = 387; 18%), injuries (n = 289; 13%), nonspecific signs and symptoms, e.g., fever (n = 281; 13%), and gastrointestinal or genitourinary conditions (n = 268; 12%), among others. Priority areas for improvement included safer systems for medication provision in community pharmacies; triage processes to enable effective and timely assessment, diagnosis, and referral of acutely sick children attending out-of-hours services; and enhanced communication for robust safety netting between professionals and parents. The main limitations of this study result from underreporting of safety incidents and variable data quality. Our findings therefore require further exploration in longitudinal studies utilizing case review methods. CONCLUSIONS: This study highlights opportunities to reduce iatrogenic harm and avoidable child deaths. Globally, healthcare systems with primary-care-led models of delivery must now examine their existing practices to determine the prevalence and burden of these priority safety issues, and utilize improvement methods to achieve sustainable improvements in care quality. Public Library of Science 2017-01-17 /pmc/articles/PMC5240916/ /pubmed/28095408 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002217 Text en © 2017 Rees et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Rees, Philippa
Edwards, Adrian
Powell, Colin
Hibbert, Peter
Williams, Huw
Makeham, Meredith
Carter, Ben
Luff, Donna
Parry, Gareth
Avery, Anthony
Sheikh, Aziz
Donaldson, Liam
Carson-Stevens, Andrew
Patient Safety Incidents Involving Sick Children in Primary Care in England and Wales: A Mixed Methods Analysis
title Patient Safety Incidents Involving Sick Children in Primary Care in England and Wales: A Mixed Methods Analysis
title_full Patient Safety Incidents Involving Sick Children in Primary Care in England and Wales: A Mixed Methods Analysis
title_fullStr Patient Safety Incidents Involving Sick Children in Primary Care in England and Wales: A Mixed Methods Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Patient Safety Incidents Involving Sick Children in Primary Care in England and Wales: A Mixed Methods Analysis
title_short Patient Safety Incidents Involving Sick Children in Primary Care in England and Wales: A Mixed Methods Analysis
title_sort patient safety incidents involving sick children in primary care in england and wales: a mixed methods analysis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5240916/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28095408
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002217
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