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Patient safety in primary care: incident reporting and significant event reviews in British general practice

机译:初级保健中的患者安全:英国一般实践中的事件报告和重大事件回顾

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Over the past 20years, healthcare has adapted to the quality revolution' by moving away from direct provision and hierarchical control mechanisms. In their place, new structures based on contractual relationships are being developed coupled with attempts to create an organisational culture that shares learning and that scrutinises existing practice so that it can be improved. The issue here is that contractual arrangements require surveillance, monitoring, regulation and governance systems that can be perceived as antipathetic to the examination of practice and subsequent learning. Historically, reporting levels from general practice have remained low; little information is shared and consequently lessons are not shared across the general practice community. Given large-scale under-engagement of general practitioners (GPs) in incident reporting systems, significant event analysis is advocated to encourage sharing of information about incidents to inform the patient safety agenda at a local and national level. Previous research has concentrated on the secondary care environment and little is known about the situation in primary care, where the majority of patient contacts with healthcare occur. To explore attitudes to incident reporting, the study adopted a qualitative approach to GPs working in a mixture of urban and rural practices reporting to a Welsh Local Health Board. The study found that GPs used significant event analysis methodology to report incidents within their practice, but acknowledged under-reporting. They were less enthusiastic about reporting externally. A number of barriers exist to reporting, including insufficient time to report, lack of feedback, fear of blame, and damage to reputations and patient confidence in a competitive environment. If incident reporting processes are perceived as supportive and formative, and where protected time is allocated to discuss incidents, then GPs are willing to participate. They also need to know how the information is used, and whether lessons are being learnt from errors.
机译:在过去的20年中,医疗保健已经摆脱了直接提供和分级控制机制,从而适应了质量革命。取而代之的是,正在开发基于合同关系的新结构,并尝试建立一种共享学习并仔细研究现有实践的组织文化,以便对其进行改进。这里的问题是,合同安排需要监视,监视,监管和治理系统,这些系统可能被视为对实践检查和后续学习感到反感。从历史上看,一般实践的报告水平一直很低;几乎没有信息共享,因此在全科医学界之间没有共享课程。鉴于全科医生(GPs)在事件报告系统中的大量参与不足,因此提倡进行重大事件分析,以鼓励共享有关事件的信息,从而在地方和国家层面告知患者安全议程。先前的研究集中在二级保健环境上,对于初级保健的情况知之甚少,在这种情况下,大多数患者与医疗机构接触。为了探索对事件报告的态度,该研究采用了定性方法来处理在城市和农村实践中向威尔士地方卫生委员会报告的全科医生。研究发现,全科医生使用重要的事件分析方法来报告其实践中的事件,但承认报告不足。他们不太热衷于进行外部报告。报告存在许多障碍,包括报告时间不足,缺乏反馈,害怕受到指责以及在竞争环境中损害声誉和患者信心。如果事件报告过程被认为是支持性和形成性的,并且在分配保护时间来讨论事件的过程中,那么GP愿意参加。他们还需要知道如何使用信息,以及是否从错误中汲取了教训。

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