Adverse events reporting during the COVID-19 pandemic in a Danish region: a retrospective analysis.

IF 2.7 4区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES International Journal for Quality in Health Care Pub Date : 2024-06-13 DOI:10.1093/intqhc/mzae049
Christian Uggerby, Søren Valgreen Knudsen, Simon Grøntved, Agnete Lund Sørensen, Karen Lyng Larsen, Charlotte Kaae Schmidt, Tilde Jensen, Jens Ravnholt Pedersen, Jan Mainz
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Abstract

The 2020 onset of the COVID-19 pandemic globally strained healthcare. Healthcare systems worldwide had to rapidly reorganize, impacting service delivery, patient care, and care-seeking behaviors. This left little time to assess the pandemic's effects on patient safety. This paper investigates COVID-19's influence on patient safety in a Danish region, using data from the national reporting system for adverse events during the initial COVID-19 surge in early 2020. This retrospective analysis investigated how the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic (January-September 2020) affected the incidence of adverse events in a Danish Region, comparing it to the same period in 2019. Data were sourced from the Danish Patient Safety Database and regional systems. Adverse events were reported numerically. Descriptive statistics were employed to describe the percentage difference in adverse events and hospital activity, as well as the rate of adverse events per 1000 activities. Additionally, COVID-19-specific adverse events from April 2020 to March 2021 were identified and analyzed, categorizing them into seven risk areas across various healthcare sectors. During Denmark's initial COVID-19 surge in early 2020, the North Denmark Region's hospitals reported a significant decrease in adverse events, with a 42.5% drop in March 2020 compared to March 2019. From January to September 2020, the number of adverse events dropped 8.5% compared to the same period in 2019. In the same period, hospital activity declined by 10.2%. The ratio of reported adverse events per 1000 hospital activities thus decreased in early 2020 but showed only a minor difference overall for January-September compared to 2019. Between April 2020 and March 2021, out of 5703 total adverse events, 324 (5.7%) were COVID-19 related. COVID-19-related events were categorized into seven distinct risk areas, reflecting diverse impacts across healthcare sectors including hospitals, general practices, pre-hospital care, and specialized services. The initial decline in reporting of adverse events likely resulted from rapid healthcare changes and under-prioritization of the reporting system during the acute phase. However, a near return to pre-pandemic reporting levels suggests a resilient reporting system despite the crisis. The study's strength lies in the comprehensive data from Danish reporting systems, though it acknowledges potential underreporting and doesn't measure the pandemic's overall impact on patient safety.

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丹麦某地区 COVID-19 大流行期间的不良事件报告:回顾性分析。
2020 年,COVID-19 大流行在全球范围内爆发,给医疗保健带来了巨大压力。全球医疗保健系统不得不迅速重组,对服务提供、患者护理和就医行为造成影响。这使得几乎没有时间来评估大流行病对患者安全的影响。本文利用 2020 年初 COVID-19 初潮期间全国不良事件报告系统的数据,研究了 COVID-19 对丹麦地区患者安全的影响。这项回顾性分析调查了COVID-19大流行初期(2020年1月至9月)对丹麦某地区不良事件发生率的影响,并与2019年同期进行了比较。数据来源于丹麦患者安全数据库和地区系统。不良事件以数字形式报告。描述性统计用于描述不良事件和医院活动的百分比差异,以及每 1000 次活动的不良事件发生率。此外,还对 2020 年 4 月至 2021 年 3 月期间发生的 COVID-19 特定不良事件进行了识别和分析,并将其归类为各医疗保健部门的七个风险领域。在丹麦 2020 年初 COVID-19 初期激增期间,北丹麦大区的医院报告的不良事件大幅减少,2020 年 3 月与 2019 年 3 月相比下降了 42.5%。与 2019 年同期相比,2020 年 1 月至 9 月的不良事件数量下降了 8.5%。同期,医院活动下降了 10.2%。因此,在 2020 年初,每 1000 次医院活动中报告的不良事件比率有所下降,但与 2019 年相比,1 月至 9 月的总体差异不大。2020 年 4 月至 2021 年 3 月期间,在 5703 起不良事件中,有 324 起(5.7%)与 COVID-19 相关。COVID-19相关事件被分为七个不同的风险领域,反映出对医疗保健行业的不同影响,包括医院、全科诊所、院前护理和专科服务。不良事件报告的最初下降可能是由于医疗保健的快速变化和急性期报告系统的优先级不足造成的。然而,报告数量几乎恢复到大流行前的水平,这表明尽管发生了危机,报告系统仍具有很强的复原力。这项研究的优势在于丹麦报告系统提供了全面的数据,尽管它承认可能存在报告不足的情况,也没有衡量大流行对患者安全的总体影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
3.80%
发文量
87
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal for Quality in Health Care makes activities and research related to quality and safety in health care available to a worldwide readership. The Journal publishes papers in all disciplines related to the quality and safety of health care, including health services research, health care evaluation, technology assessment, health economics, utilization review, cost containment, and nursing care research, as well as clinical research related to quality of care. This peer-reviewed journal is truly interdisciplinary and includes contributions from representatives of all health professions such as doctors, nurses, quality assurance professionals, managers, politicians, social workers, and therapists, as well as researchers from health-related backgrounds.
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