Author:
De Rezende Helena,Melleiro Marta M.,O. Marques Paulo A.,Barker Timothy H.
Abstract
Background:
Patient identification is considered as a fundamental part of the care process and a relevant resource for safety practices in hospital settings.
Objective:
We aimed to review the literature on interventions to reduce patient identification errors in hospital settings.
Methods:
A systematic review of effectiveness using The Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) methodology was conducted. A three-step search strategy was utilised to explore primary research published up to March 2020 in English, Spanish, and Portuguese across eight databases. Grey literature was also assessed. The titles and abstracts of the studies were screened for assessment of the inclusion criteria. Two reviewers independently appraised the full text of the selected studies and extracted data using standardised tools from JBI. Due to the heterogeneity of studies and insufficient data for statistical pooling, meta-analysis was not feasible. Therefore, the results were synthesised narratively.
Results:
Twelve studies met the review criteria; all were rated at a moderate risk of bias and four different groups of interventions were identified: educational staff interventions alone and those combined with a partnership with families and patients through education; and information technology interventions alone, and combined with an educational staff strategy. Although most studies showed a statistically significant reduction in patient identification errors, the overall quality of the evidence was considered very low.
Conclusion:
High-quality research is needed to understand the real impact of interventions to reduce patient identification errors. Nurses should recognise the importance of patient identification practices as a part of their overall commitment to improving patient safety.
PROSPERO Registration Number: CRD42018085236
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Reference57 articles.
1. Bates DW, Singh H.
Two decades since to err is human: An assessment of progress and emerging priorities in patient safety.
Health Aff (Millwood)
2018;
37
(11)
: 1736-43.
2. Yu A, Flott K, Chainani N, Fontana G, Darzi A.
2016.
Available from:
https://www.imperial.ac.uk/media/imperial-college/institute-of-global-health-innovation/centre-for-health-policy/Patient-Safety-2030-Report-VFinal.pdf
3. Institute of Medicine (IOM).
To err is human: Building a safer health system
Linda TK, Janet MC, Molla SD, Eds.
2000.
4. Lippi G, Mattiuzzi C, Bovo C, Favaloro EJ.
Managing the patient identification crisis in healthcare and laboratory medicine.
Clin Biochem
2017;
50
(10-11)
: 562-7.
5. Kern-Goldberger AR, Adelman J, Applebaum JR, Manzano W, Goffman D.
Wrong-patient ordering errors in peripartum mother-newborn pairs: A unique patient-safety challenge in obstetrics.
Obstet Gynecol
2020;
136
(1)
: 161-6.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献