Identifying hot spots for harm and blind spots across the care pathway from patient complaints about general practice

Author:

O’Dowd Emily12ORCID,Lydon Sinéad23ORCID,Lambe Kathryn4ORCID,Rudland Chris5,Hilton Aoife5,O’Connor Paul12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Discipline of General Practice, School of Medicine, National University of Ireland Galway, Galway, Ireland

2. Irish Centre for Applied Patient Safety and Simulation, National University of Ireland Galway, Galway, Ireland

3. School of Medicine, National University of Ireland Galway, Galway, Ireland

4. Health Research Board, Dublin, Ireland

5. National Complaints Governance and Learning Team, Health Service Executive, Limerick, Ireland

Abstract

Abstract Introduction Healthcare complaints are underutilized for quality improvement in general practice. Systematic analysis of complaints has identified hot spots (areas across the care pathway where issues occur frequently) and blind spots (areas across the care pathway that cannot be observed by staff) in secondary care. The Healthcare Complaints Analysis Tool (HCAT) has been adapted to the HCAT(GP). Aims This study aimed to: (i) assess whether the HCAT(GP) can systematically analyze complaints about general practice; and (ii) identify hot spots and blind spots in general practice. Methods GP complaints were sampled. Complaints were coded with the HCAT(GP), classified by HCAT(GP) category (e.g. Safety, Environment, Listening), stage of care (e.g. accessing care, referral/follow-up), severity (e.g. low, medium, high), and harm (e.g. none, major). Descriptive statistics were run to identify discrete issues. A chi-square test of independence identified hot spots, and logistic regression was used for blind spots. Results A total of 230 complaints, encompassing 432 issues (i.e. unique problems within complaints), were categorized. Relationship issues (e.g. problems with listening, communication, and patient rights) emerged most frequently (n = 174, 40%). Hot spots were identified in the consultation and the referral/follow-up stages (χ 2(5, n = 432) = 17.931, P < 0.05). A blind spot for multiple issues was identified, with the likelihood of harm increasing with number of issues (odds ratio = 2.02, confidence interval = 1.27–3.23, P < 0.05). Conclusions Complaints are valuable data for improving general practice. This study demonstrated that the HCAT(GP) can support the systematic analysis of general practice complaints, and identify hot spots and blind spots in care.

Funder

National University of Galway Ireland

Medisec Ireland

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Family Practice

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