How Effective Are Incident-Reporting Systems for Improving Patient Safety? A Systematic Literature Review.

C. Stavropoulou, C. Doherty, P. Tosey
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引用次数: 135

Abstract

CONTEXT Incident-reporting systems (IRSs) are used to gather information about patient safety incidents. Despite the financial burden they imply, however,little is known about their effectiveness. This article systematically reviews the effectiveness of IRSs as a method of improving patient safety through organizational learning. METHODS Our systematic literature review identified 2 groups of studies: (1)those comparing the effectiveness of IRSs with other methods of error reporting and (2) those examining the effectiveness of IRSs on settings, structures, and outcomes in regard to improving patient safety. We used thematic analysis to compare the effectiveness of IRSs with other methods and to synthesize what was effective, where, and why. Then, to assess the evidence concerning the ability of IRSs to facilitate organizational learning, we analyzed studies using the concepts of single-loop and double-loop learning. FINDINGS In total, we identified 43 studies, 8 that compared IRSs with other methods and 35 that explored the effectiveness of IRSs on settings, structures,and outcomes. We did not find strong evidence that IRSs performed better than other methods. We did find some evidence of single-loop learning, that is, changes to clinical settings or processes as a consequence of learning from IRSs, but little evidence of either improvements in outcomes or changes in the latent managerial factors involved in error production. In addition, there was insubstantial evidence of IRSs enabling double-loop learning, that is, a cultural change or a change in mind-set. CONCLUSIONS The results indicate that IRSs could be more effective if the criteria for what counts as an incident were explicit, they were owned and ledby clinical teams rather than centralized hospital departments, and they were embedded within organizations as part of wider safety programs.
事故报告系统对提高患者安全有多有效?系统文献综述。
事件报告系统(IRSs)用于收集有关患者安全事件的信息。然而,尽管它们意味着财政负担,但人们对它们的有效性知之甚少。这篇文章系统地回顾了IRSs作为一种通过组织学习提高患者安全的方法的有效性。方法通过系统的文献回顾,我们确定了两组研究:(1)比较内部安全系统与其他错误报告方法的有效性;(2)检查内部安全系统在提高患者安全方面的设置、结构和结果的有效性。我们使用主题分析来比较irs与其他方法的有效性,并综合哪些方法有效、在哪里有效以及为什么有效。然后,我们分析了使用单环和双环学习概念的研究,以评估关于irs促进组织学习能力的证据。总的来说,我们确定了43项研究,其中8项比较了irs与其他方法,35项探讨了irs在设置、结构和结果方面的有效性。我们没有发现强有力的证据表明irs的表现优于其他方法。我们确实发现了一些单环学习的证据,即临床环境或过程的改变,作为从irs学习的结果,但几乎没有证据表明结果的改善或涉及错误产生的潜在管理因素的改变。此外,有不充分的证据表明IRSs能够实现双循环学习,即文化变化或思维方式的变化。结论:研究结果表明,如果事故标准明确,由临床团队而不是医院的集中部门拥有和领导,并作为更广泛的安全计划的一部分嵌入组织中,则IRSs可能会更有效。
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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