Objective: To identify factors that explain the observed effects of internal auditing on improving patient safety.
Design Setting And Participants: A process evaluation study within eight departments of a university medical centre in the Netherlands.
Intervention(s): Internal auditing and feedback for improving patient safety in hospital care.
Main Outcome Measure(s): Experiences with patient safety auditing, percentage implemented improvement actions tailored to the audit results and perceived factors that hindered or facilitated the implementation of improvement actions.
Results: The respondents had positive audit experiences, with the exception of the amount of preparatory work by departments. Fifteen months after the audit visit, 21% of the intended improvement actions based on the audit results were completely implemented. Factors that hindered implementation were short implementation time: 9 months (range 5-11 months) instead of the 15 months' planned implementation time; time-consuming and labour-intensive implementation of improvement actions; and limited organizational support for quality improvement (e.g. insufficient staff capacity and time, no available quality improvement data and information and communication technological (ICT) support).
Conclusions: A well-constructed analysis and feedback of patient safety problems is insufficient to reduce the occurrence of poor patient safety outcomes. Without focus and support in the implementation of audit-based improvement actions, quality improvement by patient safety auditing will remain limited.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6819993 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzy173 | DOI Listing |
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