Factors Related to Serious Safety Events in a Children’s Hospital Patient Safety Collaborative

Author:

Burrus Stephanie1,Hall Matthew12,Tooley Emily2,Conrad Kate2,Bettenhausen Jessica L.1,Kemper Carol1

Affiliation:

1. Children’s Mercy Hospital and University of Missouri-Kansas City, Kansas City, Missouri

2. Children’s Hospital Association, Lenexa, Kansas

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Serious safety events (SSEs) occur infrequently at individual hospitals, making it difficult to establish trends to improve patient care. Patient safety organizations, such as the Child Health Patient Safety Organization (CHILDPSO), can identify trends and support learning across children’s hospitals. We aim to describe longitudinal trends in SSE rates among CHILDPSO member hospitals and describe their sources of harm. METHODS SSEs from 44 children’s hospitals were assigned severity and reported to CHILDPSO from January 1, 2015, to December 31, 2018. SSEs were classified into groups and subgroups based on analysis. Events were then tagged with up to 3 contributing factors. Subgroups with <5 events were excluded. RESULTS There were 22.5 million adjusted patient days included. The 12-month rolling average SSE rate per 10 000 adjusted patient days decreased from 0.71 to 0.41 (P < .001). There were 830 SSEs reported to CHILDPSO. The median hospital volume of SSEs was 12 events (interquartile range: 6–23), or ∼3 SSEs per year. Of the 830 events, 21.0% were high severity (SSE 1–3) and approximately two-thirds (67.0%, n = 610) were patient care management events, including subgroups of missed, delayed, or wrong diagnosis or treatment; medication errors; and suboptimal care coordination. The most common contributing factor was lack of situational awareness (17.9%, n = 382), which contributed to 1 in 5 (20%) high-severity SSEs. CONCLUSIONS Hospitals sharing SSE data through CHILDPSO have seen a decrease in SSEs. Patient care management was the most frequently seen. Future work should focus on investigation of contributing factors and risk mitigation strategies.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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