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Do daily ward interviews improve measurement of hospital quality and safety indicators? A prospective observational study
Author(s) -
Sarkies Mitchell N.,
Bowles KellyAnn,
Skinner Elizabeth H.,
Haas Romi,
Mitchell Deb,
O'Brien Lisa,
May Kerry,
Ghaly Marcelle,
Ho Melissa,
Haines Terry P.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of evaluation in clinical practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.737
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1365-2753
pISSN - 1356-1294
DOI - 10.1111/jep.12543
Subject(s) - medicine , observational study , incident report , emergency medicine , medical emergency , occupational safety and health , patient safety , prospective cohort study , health care , surgery , forensic engineering , pathology , engineering , economics , economic growth
Rationale, aims and objectives The aim of this study was to determine if the addition of daily ward interview data improves the capture of hospital quality and safety indicators compared with incident reporting systems alone. An additional aim was to determine the potential characteristics influencing under‐reporting of hospital quality and safety indicators in incident reporting systems. Methods A prospective, observational study was performed at two tertiary metropolitan public hospitals. Research assistants from allied health backgrounds met daily with the nurse in charge of the ward and discussed the occurrence of any falls, pressure injuries and rapid response medical team calls. Data were collected from four general medical wards, four surgical wards, an orthopaedic, neurosciences, plastics, respiratory, renal, sub‐acute and acute medical assessment unit. Results An estimated total of 303 falls, 221 pressure injuries and 884 rapid response medical team calls occurred between 15 wards across two hospitals, over a period of 6 months. Hospital incident reporting systems underestimated falls by 30.0%, pressure injuries by 59.3% and rapid response medical team calls by 17.0%. The use of ward interview data collection in addition to hospital incident reporting systems improved data capture of falls by 23.8% ( n  = 72), pressure injuries by 21.7% ( n  = 48) and rapid response medical team calls by 12.7% ( n  = 112). Falls events were significantly less likely to be reported if they occurred on a Monday ( P  = 0.04) and pressure injuries significantly more likely to be reported if they occurred on a Wednesday ( P  = 0.01). Conclusions Hospital quality and safety indicators (falls, pressure injuries and rapid response medical team calls) were under‐reported in incident reporting systems, with variability in under‐reporting between wards and the day of event occurrence. The use of ward interview data collection in addition to hospital incident reporting systems improved reporting of hospital quality and safety indicators.

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