定义手术服务中人为错误对不良事件的贡献。

IF 0.4 4区 医学 Q4 SURGERY
South African Journal of Surgery Pub Date : 2024-12-01
H Wain, D L Clarke, S Wall
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:本研究旨在评估南非单一外科部门10年来人为错误对不良事件的贡献。方法:进行回顾性数据库分析以确定所有不良事件,并进一步评估以确定哪些与错误相关。结果:2012年12月至2023年1月共发生不良事件14 237例,其中判断为错误相关的不良事件7 504例,占52.7%。每次入院的错误率为14%,每次住院日的错误率为2%。提供护理期间的错误占所有错误的76%,占所有不良事件的40%。其中,药物差错占29%,留置器械造成的差错占28%,医源性损伤占18%。评估错误占总错误的14%,占所有不良事件的7%,其中临床评估失败占55.8%,漏伤占19%。混合型输入错误占总数的10%。按年份评估,2013 - 2016年呈上升趋势,2016 - 2022年呈下降趋势。错误相关的不良事件显著增加了住院时间和死亡率。结论:错误导致了一半以上的不良事件,增加了住院时间和死亡率,并且是可以避免的。错误可能发生在入院的任何阶段,强调了多层次干预的必要性。所记录的误差减少是由于多次努力的累积效应,而不是一次干预。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Defining the contribution of human error to adverse events in a surgical service.

Background: This study aimed to assess the contribution of human error to adverse events over 10 years in a single surgical department in South Africa.

Methods: A retrospective database analysis was undertaken to identify all adverse events, which were further assessed to identify which were error-associated.

Results: A total of 14 237 adverse events occurred between December 2012 and January 2023, of which 7 504 (52.7%) were judged to be error-associated. An error rate of 14% per admission, or 2% per inpatient day was shown. Errors during delivery of care accounted for 76% of all errors and 40% of all adverse events. Of those, medication errors contributed 29%, those due to indwelling devices contributed 28%, and iatrogenic injuries 18%. Errors in assessment accounted for 14% of the total errors and 7% of all adverse events, with clinical assessment failure contributing 55.8% and missed injuries 19%. Mixed type errors contributed 10% of the total. Assessment by year demonstrated an upward trend from 2013 to 2016, followed by a downward trend from 2016 to 2022. Error-associated adverse events increased length of stay and mortality significantly.

Conclusion: Error contributes to more than half of adverse events and increased length of stay and mortality and is potentially avoidable. Errors may occur at any stage during an admission and highlights the need for multilevel interventions. The decrease in error noted is due to the cumulative effect of multiple endeavours, and not a single intervention.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
20.00%
发文量
43
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The South African Journal of Surgery (SAJS) is a quarterly, general surgical journal. It carries research articles and letters, editorials, clinical practice and other surgical articles and personal opinion, South African health-related news, obituaries and general correspondence.
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