A Coproduced Family Reporting Intervention to Improve Safety Surveillance and Reduce Disparities

Author:

Khan Alisa12,Baird Jennifer3,Mauskar Sangeeta12,Haskell Helen W.4,Habibi Alexandra N.15,Ngo Tiffany16,Aldarondo Alexandra1,Berry Jay G.12,Copp Katherine L.17,Liu Jessica P.8,Elder Brynn1,Gray Kathryn P.128,Hennessy Karen9,Humphrey Kate E.1210,Luff Donna11,Mallick Nandini1,Matherson Susan9,McGeachey Amanda G.12,Melvin Patrice13,Pinkham Amy L.9,Quiñones-Pérez Bianca12,Rogers Jayne9,Singer Sara J.1415,Stoeck Patricia A.12,Toomey Sara L.12,Viswanath K.1617,Wilder Jayme L.12,Schuster Mark A.18,Landrigan Christopher P.121920

Affiliation:

1. aDivision of General Pediatrics, Departments of Pediatrics and

2. bPediatrics

3. cInstitute for Nursing and Interprofessional Research, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California

4. dMothers Against Medical Error, Columbia, South Carolina

5. eNew York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York, New York

6. fGeorge Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia

7. gUniversity of Minnesota School of Public Health, Minneapolis, Minnesota

8. hInstitutional Centers for Clinical and Translational Research, Biostatistics, and Research Design Center (ICCTR BARD)

9. iNursing

10. jProgram for Patient Safety

11. kAnesthesia, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts;

12. lMaine Children’s Cancer Program at MaineHealth, the Barbara Bush Children’s Hospital, Scarborough, Maine

13. mOffice of Health Equity and Inclusion, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts

14. nDepartment of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California

15. oOrganizational Behavior, Stanford Graduate School of Business, Stanford, California

16. pDepartment of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts

17. qMcGraw-Patterson Center for Population Sciences, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts

18. rKaiser Permanente Bernard J. Tyson School of Medicine, Pasadena, California

19. sDivision of Sleep and Circadian Disorders, Departments of Medicine and Neurology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts

20. tDivision of Sleep Medicine, and Departments of Medicine,

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Examine family safety-reporting after implementing a parent–nurse–physician–leader coproduced, health literacy-informed, family safety-reporting intervention for hospitalized families of children with medical complexity. METHODS: We implemented an English and Spanish mobile family-safety-reporting tool, staff and family education, and process for sharing comments with unit leaders on a dedicated inpatient complex care service at a pediatric hospital. Families shared safety concerns via predischarge surveys (baseline and intervention) and mobile tool (intervention). Three physicians with patient safety expertise classified events. We compared safety-reporting baseline (via survey) versus intervention (via survey and/or mobile tool) with generalized estimating equations and sub-analyzed data by COVID-19-era and educational attainment. We also compared mobile tool-detected event rates with hospital voluntary incident reporting. RESULTS: 232 baseline and 208 intervention parents participated (78.2% consented); 29.5% of baseline families versus 38.2% of intervention families reported safety concerns (P = .09). Adjusted odds ratio (95% CI) of families reporting safety concerns intervention versus baseline was 1.6 (1.0–2.6) overall, 2.6 (1.3–5.4) for those with < college education, and 3.1 (1.3–7.3) in the COVID-19–era subgroup. Safety concerns reported via mobile tool (34.6% of enrolled parents) included 42 medical errors, 43 nonsafety-related quality issues, 11 hazards, and 4 other. 15% of mobile tool concerns were also detected with voluntary incident reporting. CONCLUSIONS: Family safety-reporting was unchanged overall after implementing a mobile reporting tool, though reporting increased among families with lower educational attainment and during the COVID-19 pandemic. The tool identified many events not otherwise captured by staff-only voluntary incident reporting. Hospitals should proactively engage families in reporting to improve safety, quality, and equity.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

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