March 12, 2019
Dive Brief:
- For the
second year in a row, diagnostic errors and improper management of test
results in EHRs top ECRI Institute's list of patient safety concerns
facing healthcare leaders. The list is intended as a starting point
for organizations to review their patient safety records and set
priorities for improvement.
- Other
major issues include overuse of antibiotics, clinician burnout and the
growing but loosely regulated use of mobile health technologies in the
home, according to the 2019 Top 10 Patient Safety Concerns list.
- "We have to recognize the
limits of current technology and ensure that we have processes in place to
close the loop on diagnostic tests," William Marcella, executive
director of operations and analytics for ECRI Institute's Patient Safety
Organization, said in a statement. "This safety issue cuts across
acute and ambulatory settings, requiring teamwork across the health
system."
Patient
safety is a major concern for hospitals and health systems, impacting patient
outcomes as well as a healthcare facility's quality, reputation and financials
as more payers reimburse for value rather than volume.
Diagnostic
errors once again topped ECRI's list of patient safety challenges this year,
released in conjunction with National Patient Safety Awareness Week. Part of
the problem is EHRs, which help to track test results and flag issues, but
can't provide a diagnosis, ECRI notes. Still, providers must document patients'
diagnoses, treatments and follow-up plans in EHRs so that future clinicians can
understand and act on the information.
To
fight antibiotic resistance, which claimed the second spot on the list, ECRI
recommended providers ask four questions before administering a drug: Does the
patient's infection respond to antibiotics? If the answer is yes, is the
patient getting the right antibiotic, dose and route of administration? Would a
more targeted antibiotic work better? How long should the patient receive the
antibiotic?
To
reduce burnout, experts suggested organizations look beyond EHRs and address
provider concerns about workload, performance criteria and poor resource
allocation on a system-wide scale. "Leadership must strive to make
providers feel they are treated as human beings, whose opinions and abilities
are valued, rather than as cogs in a wheel," the report says.
The
increasing use of mobile health technologies brings with it a number of safety
concerns, from lack of regulation to ensuring data are accurately transmitted
to providers and patients actually use the device, according to the report. To
improve safety, organizations should establish steps for informing providers
when user errors occur or devices go silent. They also need protocols for
identifying patients who will benefit from these devices and train providers
and patients on how to use them.
The
report also shines a light on behavioral health, noting provider unease and
inexperience can lead to overlooking patients' needs or exacerbation of
symptoms. Efforts to address the issue include establishing behavioral
emergency response teams within hospitals and additional training for
providers.
Rounding
out the list of top patient safety concerns are problems related to medical
staff's development and maintenance of skills, standardization of safety
efforts across large health systems, detection of changes in a patient's
condition, early recognition of sepsis across the care continuum and infections
from peripherally inserted IV lines.
https://www.healthcaredive.com/news/diagnostic-errors-compounded-by-ehrs-still-no-1-patient-safety-concern/550304/
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