Health Information Technology–Related Wrong-Patient Errors: Context is Critical

Author:

Kim Tracy1,Howe Jessica1,Franklin Ella1,Krevat Seth1,Jones Rebecca2,Adams Katharine1,Fong Allan1,Oaks Jessica2,Ratwani Raj3

Affiliation:

1. MedStar Health National Center for Human Factors in Healthcare

2. Patient Safety Authority

3. MedStar Health National Center for Human Factors in Healthcare, Georgetown University School of Medicine

Abstract

Health information technology (HIT) provides many benefits, but also facilitates certain types of errors, such as wrong-patient errors in which one patient is mistaken for another. These errors can have serious patient safety consequences and there has been significant effort to mitigate the risk of these errors through national patient safety goals, in-depth research, and the development of safety toolkits. Nonetheless, these errors persist. We analyzed 1,189 patient safety event reports using a safety science and resilience engineering approach, which focuses on identifying processes to discover errors before they reach the patient so these processes can be expanded. We analyzed the general care processes in which wrong-patient errors occurred, the clinical process step during which the error occurred and was discovered, and whether the error reached the patient. For those errors that reached the patient, we analyzed the impact on the patient, and for those that did not reach the patient, we analyzed how the error was caught. Our results demonstrate that errors occurred across multiple general care process areas, with 24.4% of wrong-patient error events reaching the patient. Analysis of clinical process steps indicated that most errors occurred during ordering/prescribing (n=498; 41.9%) and most errors were discovered during review of information (n=286; 24.1%). Patients were primarily impacted by inappropriate medication administration (n=110; 37.9%) and the wrong test or procedure being performed (n=65; 22.4%). When errors were caught before reaching the patient, this was primarily because of nurses, technicians, or other healthcare staff (n=303; 60.5%). The differences between the general care processes can inform wrong-patient error risk mitigation strategies. Based on these analyses and the broader literature, this study offers recommendations for addressing wrong-patient errors using safety science and resilience engineering, and it provides a unique lens for evaluating HIT wrong-patient errors.

Publisher

Patient Safety Authority

Subject

General Medicine

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