Common contributing factors of diagnostic error: A retrospective analysis of 109 serious adverse event reports from Dutch hospitals.

IF 5.6 1区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES BMJ Quality & Safety Pub Date : 2023-08-09 DOI:10.1136/bmjqs-2022-015876
Jacky Hooftman, Aart Cornelis Dijkstra, Ilse Suurmeijer, Akke van der Bij, Ellen Paap, Laura Zwaan
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Abstract

Introduction: Although diagnostic errors have gained renewed focus within the patient safety domain, measuring them remains a challenge. They are often measured using methods that lack information on decision-making processes given by involved physicians (eg, record reviews). The current study analyses serious adverse event (SAE) reports from Dutch hospitals to identify common contributing factors of diagnostic errors in hospital medicine. These reports are the results of thorough investigations by highly trained, independent hospital committees into the causes of SAEs. The reports include information from involved healthcare professionals and patients or family obtained through interviews.

Methods: All 71 Dutch hospitals were invited to participate in this study. Participating hospitals were asked to send four diagnostic SAE reports of their hospital. Researchers applied the Safer Dx Instrument, a Generic Analysis Framework, the Diagnostic Error Evaluation and Research (DEER) taxonomy and the Eindhoven Classification Model (ECM) to analyse reports.

Results: Thirty-one hospitals submitted 109 eligible reports. Diagnostic errors most often occurred in the diagnostic testing, assessment and follow-up phases according to the DEER taxonomy. The ECM showed human errors as the most common contributing factor, especially relating to communication of results, task planning and execution, and knowledge. Combining the most common DEER subcategories and the most common ECM classes showed that clinical reasoning errors resulted from failures in knowledge, and task planning and execution. Follow-up errors and errors with communication of test results resulted from failures in coordination and monitoring, often accompanied by usability issues in electronic health record design and missing protocols.

Discussion: Diagnostic errors occurred in every hospital type, in different specialties and with different care teams. While clinical reasoning errors remain a common problem, often caused by knowledge and skill gaps, other frequent errors in communication of test results and follow-up require different improvement measures (eg, improving technological systems).

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诊断错误的常见因素:对荷兰医院109例严重不良事件报告的回顾性分析
虽然诊断错误在患者安全领域重新受到关注,但测量它们仍然是一个挑战。通常使用的测量方法缺乏有关医生提供的决策过程的信息(例如,记录审查)。目前的研究分析了荷兰医院的严重不良事件(SAE)报告,以确定医院医学诊断错误的常见因素。这些报告是经过训练有素的独立医院委员会对突发事件原因进行彻底调查的结果。这些报告包括通过访谈获得的来自相关医疗保健专业人员和患者或家属的信息。方法:邀请荷兰全部71家医院参与本研究。参与医院被要求提交四份本医院的SAE诊断报告。研究人员使用了Safer Dx仪器、通用分析框架、诊断错误评估和研究(DEER)分类法和埃因霍温分类模型(ECM)来分析报告。结果:31家医院提交了109份合格报告。根据DEER分类,诊断错误最常发生在诊断测试、评估和随访阶段。ECM显示,人为错误是最常见的影响因素,尤其是在结果沟通、任务计划和执行以及知识方面。结合最常见的DEER子类别和最常见的ECM类别表明,临床推理错误是由于知识失败、任务计划和执行失败造成的。后续错误和测试结果沟通错误是由于协调和监测失败造成的,往往伴随着电子健康记录设计中的可用性问题和缺少协议。讨论:诊断错误发生在每种医院类型、不同专科和不同护理团队。虽然临床推理错误仍然是一个常见问题,通常是由知识和技能差距引起的,但在检测结果的沟通和后续工作中出现的其他常见错误需要采取不同的改进措施(例如,改进技术系统)。
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来源期刊
BMJ Quality & Safety
BMJ Quality & Safety HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES-
CiteScore
9.80
自引率
7.40%
发文量
104
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: BMJ Quality & Safety (previously Quality & Safety in Health Care) is an international peer review publication providing research, opinions, debates and reviews for academics, clinicians and healthcare managers focused on the quality and safety of health care and the science of improvement. The journal receives approximately 1000 manuscripts a year and has an acceptance rate for original research of 12%. Time from submission to first decision averages 22 days and accepted articles are typically published online within 20 days. Its current impact factor is 3.281.
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