Author:
Middleton Sandy,Chapman Barbara,Griffiths Rhonda,Chester Rosemary
Abstract
Objective: To determine the opinion of medical
and nursing clinicians of recommendations arising
from root cause analyses (RCAs) conducted
between 1 April 2003 and 30 September 2004 in
one Sydney Area Health Service.
Methods: Twelve doctors (response rate 86%)
and 17 nurses (response rate 100%) reviewed
328 recommendations arising from 59 RCAs and
completed a self-administered survey.
Results: Nurses were significantly more likely than
doctors to rate recommendations made by the
original RCA team as ?relevant to the causal statement?,
?understandable?, ?measurable? and ?achievable?.
Doctors and nurses involved in the original
RCA were significantly more likely to state that
recommendations would ?eliminate? or ?control? the
risk of a similar event occurring in the future.
Conclusions: This is one of the first studies to
analyse RCA data at the area health service level.
That nurses reviewed recommendations more
favourably may have implications for successful
adoption of recommendations at the clinical level.
We recommend further detailed analyses of recommendations
arising from RCAs in order to
determine their usefulness to inform strategies for
improved patient safety.
Cited by
8 articles.
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