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Identification of serious and reportable events in home care: a Delphi survey to develop consensus. | LitMetric

Identification of serious and reportable events in home care: a Delphi survey to develop consensus.

Int J Qual Health Care

Nursing Health Services Research Unit, Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing, University of Toronto, 155 College Street, Suite 130, Toronto, ON Canada M5T 1P8.

Published: April 2014

Objective: To assess which client events should be considered reportable and preventable in home care (HC) settings in the opinion of HC safety experts.

Background: Patient safety in acute care settings has been well documented; however, there are limited data about this issue in HC. While many organizations collect information about 'incidents', there are no standards for reporting and it is challenging to compare incident rates among organizations.

Design: A 29-item electronic survey that included potential HC safety issues was used in a two-round Delphi study.

Setting And Participants: Twenty-four pan-Canadian HC safety experts participated in an electronic survey.

Main Outcome Measures: Perceived reportability and preventability of patient safety events, HC.

Results: The events that were perceived as being most reportable and preventable included the following: a serious injury related to inappropriate client service plan (e.g. incomplete/inaccurate assessments, poor care plan design, flawed implementation); an adverse reaction requiring emergency room visit or hospitalization related to a medication-related event; a catheter-site infection (e.g. a new peritoneal dialysis infection or peritonitis); any serious event related to care or services that are contrary to current professional or other practice standards (e.g. incorrect treatment regimen, theft, retention of a foreign object in a wound, individual practicing outside scope or competence).

Conclusion: These data represent an important step in the development and validation of standard metrics about client safety in HC. The results address an expanding area of health services where there is a need to improve standardization and reporting.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzu008DOI Listing

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