Is the ‘never event’ concept a useful safety management strategy in complex primary healthcare systems?

Author:

Bowie Paul123,Baylis Diane4,Price Julie4,Bradshaw Pallavi4,McNab Duncan12,Ker Jean1,Carson-Stevans Andrew5,Ross Alastair6

Affiliation:

1. Medical Directorate, NHS Education for Scotland, 102 West Port, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK EH3 9DN

2. Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University Avenue, University of Glasgow, Scotland, UK G12 8QQ

3. Department of Nursing and Midwifery, School of Health and Social Care, Staffordshire University, College Road, Stoke-On-Trent, UK ST4 2DE

4. Education and Risk Department, Medical Protection Society, (www.medicalprotection.org), 2 Victoria Place, Leeds, England, UK LS11 5AE

5. Division of Population Medicine, School of Medicine, Cardiff University, Cardiff, Wales, UK CF10 3AT

6. Dental School, University of Glasgow, 378 Sauchiehall Street, Scotland, UK Glasgow G2 3JZ

Abstract

Abstract Why is the area important? A sub-group of rare but serious patient safety incidents, known as ‘never events,’ is judged to be ‘avoidable.’ There is growing interest in this concept in international care settings, including UK primary care. However, issues have been raised regarding the well-intentioned coupling of ‘preventable harm’ with zero tolerance ‘never events,’ especially around the lack of evidence for such harm ever being totally preventable. What is already known and gaps in knowledge? We consider whether the ideal of reducing preventable harm to ‘never’ is better for patient safety than, for example, the goal of managing risk materializing into harm to ‘as low as reasonably practicable,’ which is well-established in other complex socio-technical systems and is demonstrably achievable. We reflect on the ‘never event’ concept in the primary care context specifically, although the issues and the polarized opinion highlighted are widely applicable. Recent developments to validate primary care ‘never event’ lists are summarized and alternative safety management strategies considered, e.g. Safety-I and Safety-II. Future areas for advancing research and practice Despite their rarity, if there is to be a policy focus on ‘never events,’ then specialist training for key workforce members is necessary to enable examination of the complex system interactions and design issues, which contribute to such events. The ‘never event’ term is well intentioned but largely aspirational—however, it is important to question prevailing assumptions about how patient safety can be understood and improved by offering alternative ways of thinking about related complexities.

Funder

ISQua

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,General Medicine

Reference40 articles.

1. Preventable deaths due to problems in care in English acute hospitals: a retrospective case record review study;Hogan;British Med J Quality and Safety,2012

2. Understanding pressures in general practice. The Kings Fund. London;The Kings Fund,2016

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