英格兰各地的静脉输液实践及其对患者安全的影响:一项混合方法的观察性研究

A. Blandford, D. Furniss, G. Galal-Edeen, G. Chumbley, Li Wei, A. Mayer, B. Franklin
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引用次数: 6

摘要

背景静脉(IV)给药传统上被认为是容易出错的,有很高的潜在危害。美国最近的一项多站点研究显示,尽管总体错误率很高,但令人惊讶的是,潜在的有害错误很少。然而,关于英国的输液实践以及它们与患病率和错误类型的关系,证据有限。目的确定英国医院输液管理中错误和差异的发生率、类型和严重程度,并探索错误、差异和实践的变化来源,包括智能泵的贡献。设计阶段1包括静脉输液的观察点患病率研究,包括汇报访谈和焦点小组。观察者将每次输液与用药顺序和当地政策进行了比较。根据其对患者的潜在伤害,偏差被归类为错误或差异。在观察员汇报期间,对背景问题和偏差原因进行了定性探讨,并在补充分析中进行了分析。第二阶段包括在五个参与地点进行深入的观察性研究,以更好地了解错误的原因以及如何保持安全。与包括卫生专业人员和决策者、公众和行业在内的主要利益攸关方团体举行了讲习班。建立了16个英国国家医疗服务体系医院信托基金。结果收集了1326例患者和2008次输液的点流行率数据。在231次输液中总共观察到240个错误,在1065次输液中观察到1489个差异。23个错误(占所有输注的1.1%)被认为具有潜在危害;如果没有被截获,其中一种可能会对患者造成短期伤害,但没有一种被认为可能延长住院时间或导致长期伤害。不同信托的偏差类型和发生率差异很大,地方政策也是如此。有时为了提高效率或满足患者需求而偏离医嘱和当地政策。目前实施的智能泵收效甚微。工作人员通过应对系统性挑战,制定了务实管理效率和安全的做法。限制当地观察员可能对不同地点的错误进行了不同的评估,尽管已采取措施通过观察员培训、汇报、审查和清理数据来最大限度地减少差异。每一项深入研究都涉及一名研究人员,而且这些研究在规模和范围上都是有限的。结论错误和差异在日常输液管理中很常见,但大多数对患者的伤害较小。通过将静脉输液管理视为一个复杂的适应性系统,可以更好地理解这些发现。更好地了解绩效可变性以战略性地管理风险可能比努力消除所有偏差更有助于提高患者安全性。未来的工作审查静脉输液管理政策有潜在的价值,以减少不必要的可变性,管理工作人员的工作量,让患者参与进来,同时保留政策必须符合目的,与特定的病房情况和治疗方案相结合,并对不同药物的风险敏感的原则。将输液管理理解为一个复杂的适应性系统的进一步工作可能会为管理患者安全提供新的见解。资助该项目由美国国立卫生研究院卫生服务和分娩研究计划资助,并将在《卫生服务和交付研究》上全文发表;第8卷第7期。有关更多项目信息,请访问NIHR期刊图书馆网站。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Intravenous infusion practices across England and their impact on patient safety: a mixed-methods observational study
Background Intravenous (IV) medication administration has traditionally been regarded to be error-prone with high potential for harm. A recent US multisite study revealed surprisingly few potentially harmful errors despite a high overall error rate. However, there is limited evidence about infusion practices in England and how they relate to prevalence and types of error. Objectives To determine the prevalence, types and severity of errors and discrepancies in infusion administration in English hospitals, and to explore sources of variation in errors, discrepancies and practices, including the contribution of smart pumps. Design Phase 1 comprised an observational point-prevalence study of IV infusions, with debrief interviews and focus groups. Observers compared each infusion against the medication order and local policy. Deviations were classified as either errors or discrepancies based on their potential for patient harm. Contextual issues and reasons for deviations were explored qualitatively during observer debriefs, and analytically in supplementary analyses. Phase 2 comprised in-depth observational studies at five of the participating sites to better understand causes of error and how safety is maintained. Workshops were held with key stakeholder groups, including health professionals and policy-makers, the public and industry. Setting Sixteen English NHS hospital trusts. Results Point-prevalence data were collected from 1326 patients and 2008 infusions. In total, 240 errors were observed in 231 infusions and 1489 discrepancies were observed in 1065 infusions. Twenty-three errors (1.1% of all infusions) were considered potentially harmful; one might have resulted in short-term patient harm had it not been intercepted, but none was judged likely to prolong hospital stay or result in long-term harm. Types and prevalence of deviations varied widely among trusts, as did local policies. Deviations from medication orders and local policies were sometimes made for efficiency or to respond to patient need. Smart pumps, as currently implemented, had little effect. Staff had developed practices to manage efficiency and safety pragmatically by working around systemic challenges. Limitations Local observers may have assessed errors differently across sites, although steps were taken to minimise differences through observer training, debriefs, and review and cleaning of data. Each in-depth study involved a single researcher, and these were limited in scale and scope. Conclusions Errors and discrepancies are common in everyday infusion administration but most have low potential for patient harm. Findings are best understood by viewing IV infusion administration as a complex adaptive system. Better understanding of performance variability to strategically manage risk may be more helpful for improving patient safety than striving to eliminate all deviations. Future work There is potential value in reviewing policy around IV infusion administration to reduce unnecessary variability, manage staff workload and engage patients, while retaining the principle that policy has to be fit for purpose, contextualised to the particular ward situation and treatment protocol, and sensitive to the risks of different medications. Further work on understanding infusion administration as a complex adaptive system might deliver new insights into managing patient safety. Funding This project was funded by the NIHR Health Services and Delivery Research programme and will be published in full in Health Services and Delivery Research; Vol. 8, No. 7. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
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