Enhancing Diagnostic and Patient Safety in Healthcare Systems: Key Insights from the World Patient Safety Day 2024 Commemoration in Uganda.

IF 2.2 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Drug, Healthcare and Patient Safety Pub Date : 2025-05-14 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.2147/DHPS.S520743
Munanura Turyasiima, Prima Maria Niwampeire, Martin Ssendyona, Balbina Gillian Akot, Miriam Acheng, Simon Peter Katongole, Joseph Okware, Juliet Tumwikirize, Kenneth Mutesasira, Joshua Atepo, Robinah Kaitiritimba, Joshua Epuitai, Benson Tuhwezeine Tumwesigye, Gaston Turinawe, Robert Mutumba, Martin Ndifuna, Geofrey Musinguzi, Denise Asaba Kemigisa
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The 4th World Patient Safety Day (WPSD) 2024 commemoration in Uganda, themed "Improving Diagnosis for Patient Safety", highlighted critical challenges and opportunities in reducing diagnostic errors within healthcare systems. This review synthesizes key insights from the event, focusing on factors contributing to diagnostic inaccuracies, systemic gaps, and actionable strategies for improvement.

Methods: Using a qualitative synthesis approach guided by the Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Research (COREQ), we analyzed data from a hybrid webinar (210 participants) and a four-day medical camp (600+ patients served). Thematic analysis identified four key areas: (i) factors influencing diagnostic errors, (ii) the role of laboratory and imaging services in diagnosis error prevention, (iii) existing health system interventions, and (iv) patient empowerment in the diagnostic process.

Results: Diagnostic errors in Uganda stem from cognitive biases, systemic inefficiencies (eg, understaffing, inadequate equipment), and financial barriers in private healthcare. Strengthening laboratory capacity, digitizing health records, and enhancing provider-patient communication emerged as pivotal solutions. The Ministry of Health's initiatives such as laboratory accreditation, the 5S quality improvement framework, and patient feedback mechanisms demonstrate progress but require scaling.

Recommendations: We propose a multi-level approach: (1) national policies for error reporting and patient safety frameworks, (2) expanded supportive supervision and digitization (eg, EHRs with decision support), (3) stricter regulation of private healthcare, and (4) community engagement to improve health literacy and early care-seeking.

Conclusion: Reducing diagnostic errors demands systemic reforms, technological integration, and collaborative stakeholder engagement. Uganda's WPSD 2024 insights offer a model for similar low-resource settings to enhance diagnostic accuracy and patient safety.

加强医疗保健系统的诊断和患者安全:来自乌干达2024年世界患者安全日纪念活动的重要见解。
背景:第四届世界患者安全日(WPSD) 2024年纪念活动在乌干达举行,主题为“改善诊断,促进患者安全”,强调了减少医疗保健系统诊断错误方面的重大挑战和机遇。本综述综合了该事件的关键见解,重点关注导致诊断不准确的因素、系统差距和可操作的改进策略。方法:采用以定性研究报告综合标准(COREQ)为指导的定性综合方法,我们分析了来自混合网络研讨会(210名参与者)和为期四天的医疗营(服务了600多名患者)的数据。专题分析确定了四个关键领域:(i)影响诊断错误的因素;(ii)实验室和成像服务在预防诊断错误方面的作用;(iii)现有卫生系统干预措施;(iv)在诊断过程中赋予患者权力。结果:乌干达的诊断错误源于认知偏差、系统性效率低下(如人员不足、设备不足)和私营医疗机构的财务障碍。加强实验室能力、数字化健康记录和加强医患沟通成为关键的解决方案。卫生部的实验室认证、5S质量改进框架和患者反馈机制等举措显示出进展,但需要扩大规模。建议:我们提出了一个多层次的方法:(1)国家错误报告政策和患者安全框架;(2)扩大支持性监管和数字化(例如,带有决策支持的电子病历);(3)对私营医疗机构进行更严格的监管;(4)社区参与,以提高健康素养和早期求医。结论:减少诊断错误需要系统改革、技术整合和利益相关者的协作参与。乌干达的WPSD 2024洞察为类似的低资源环境提供了一个模型,以提高诊断准确性和患者安全性。
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
Drug, Healthcare and Patient Safety
Drug, Healthcare and Patient Safety HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES-
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
审稿时长
16 weeks
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