Patient safety in actioning and communicating blood test results in primary care: a UK wide audit using the Primary care Academic CollaboraTive (PACT).

IF 1.3 Q4 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Jessica Watson, Polly Duncan, Alexander Burrell, Ian Bennett-Britton, Sam Hodgson, Samuel W D Merriel, Salman Waqar, Alexandra Razumovskaya-Hough, Penny F Whiting
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Errors associated with failures in filing, actioning and communicating blood test results can lead to delayed and missed diagnoses and patient harm. This study aimed to audit how blood tests in primary care are filed, actioned and communicated in primary care, to identify areas for patient safety improvements.

Methods: UK primary care clinicians were recruited through the Primary Care Academic CollaboraTive (PACT). PACT members audited 50 recent sets of blood tests from their practice and retrospectively extracted data on blood test result coding, actioning and communication. PACT members received a practice report, showing their own results, benchmarked against other participating practices.

Results: PACT members from 57 general practices across all four UK nations collected data on 2572 patients who had blood tests in April 2021. In 89.9% (n=2311) they agreed with the initial clinician's actioning of blood tests; 10.1% disagreed, either partially (7.1%) or fully (3.0%).In 44% of patients (n=1132) an action (eg, 'make an appointment') was specified by the filing clinician. This action was carried out in 89.7% (n=1015/1132) of cases; in 6.8% (n=77) the action was not carried out, in 3.5% (n=40) it was unclear. In the 117 cases where the test result had not been actioned 38% (n=45) were felt to be at low risk of harm, 1.7% (n=2) were at high risk of harm, 0.85% (n=1) came to harm.Overall, in 47% (n=1210) of patients there was no evidence in the electronic health records that results had been communicated. Out of 1176 patients with one or more abnormal results there was no evidence of test communication in 30.6% (n=360). There were large variations between practices in rates of actioning and communicating tests.

Conclusion: This research demonstrates variation in the way blood test results are actioned and communicated, with important patient safety implications.

在初级医疗中对血液检测结果进行处理和沟通时的患者安全:利用初级医疗学术合作组织(PACT)进行的英国范围内的审计。
背景:在归档、处理和传达血液化验结果过程中出现的错误会导致诊断延误和漏诊,并对患者造成伤害。本研究旨在对初级医疗中血液化验结果的归档、处理和沟通方式进行审核,以确定改善患者安全的领域:方法:通过初级医疗学术合作组织(PACT)招募英国初级医疗临床医生。PACT 成员对其诊所最近的 50 套血液化验结果进行了审核,并回顾性地提取了血液化验结果编码、处理和沟通方面的数据。PACT 成员收到了一份实践报告,报告显示了他们自己的结果,并与其他参与实践的结果进行了比较:来自英国所有四个国家的 57 家全科诊所的 PACT 成员收集了 2021 年 4 月接受血液检测的 2572 名患者的数据。89.9%的患者(人数=2311)同意初始临床医生对血液检测采取的行动;10.1%的患者不同意,包括部分不同意(7.1%)或完全不同意(3.0%)。44%的患者(人数=1132)的备案临床医生指定了一项行动(如 "预约")。89.7%的病例(n=1015/1132)采取了该行动;6.8%的病例(n=77)未采取该行动,3.5%的病例(n=40)行动不明确。在 117 例未对检测结果采取行动的病例中,38%(n=45)被认为具有低危害风险,1.7%(n=2)具有高危害风险,0.85%(n=1)会造成危害。在有一个或多个异常结果的 1176 名患者中,有 30.6%(n=360)的患者没有证据表明曾进行过检查沟通。不同医疗机构在化验结果的处理和通报率方面存在很大差异:这项研究表明,血液检验结果的处理和通报方式存在差异,对患者安全有重要影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
BMJ Open Quality
BMJ Open Quality Nursing-Leadership and Management
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
226
审稿时长
20 weeks
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