Title: Event Reporting and Patient Safety:
1Event Reporting and Patient Safety
- You Cant fix it If You Dont Know About it!
Harold S. Kaplan MD Columbia University hsk18_at_colu
mbia.edu
Supported by an NHLBI RO1 Grant for Event
Reporting System in Transfusion Medicine
2To Err is Human Institute of Medicine
Report1999
- Identify and learn from errors through reporting
systems both mandatory and voluntary.
3Congressional Action
- Senate Bill 2038 - Medical Error Reduction Act of
2000 - Senate Bill 2378 - Stop All Frequent Errors
(SAFE) - Patient Safety Improvement Act -(Kennedy)
Voluntary, non-punitive environment to share
safety information without fear of reprisal
4Interest in Other Countries
- Great Britain- An Organization with a Memory
- Report of the chief medical officer on learning
from adverse events in the National Health
Service - Australia - The Quality in Australian Heath Care
Study
5Ubiquitous Calls for Reporting Systems
- Kennedy bill
- IOM report
- JCAHO
- 15 States and counting
- Illinois
6Types of Events
MERS-TM is designed to capture all types of
events.
7Heinreichs Ratio1
It has been proposed that reporting systems could
be evaluated on the proportion of minor to more
serious incidents reported 2
- 1 Major injury
- 29 Minor injuries
- 300 No-injury accidents
1
29
300
1. Heinreich HW Industrial Accident Prevention,
NY And London 1941
2. An Organization With a Memory, A report of an
expert group on learning from adverse events in
the NHS chaired by the Chief Medical Officer, The
Stationary Office, London 2000
8Misadventures
The event actually happened and some levelof
harm possibly death occurred.
9No Harm Events
The event actually occurred but no harmwas done.
10Near Miss Events
The potential for harm may have been present, but
unwanted consequences were preventedbecause
somerecovery actionwas taken.
11Return to Normal
Technical Failure
Near Miss
Yes
Adequate Defenses?
Human Error
Dangerous Situation
Yes
No
Adequate Recovery?
Developing Incident
Organizational Failure
No
Van der Schaafs Incident Causation Model
12Recovery planned or unplanned
Study of recovery actions is valuable.
- Planned recovery
- built into our processes
- Unplanned recovery
- lucky catches
13Six-Year Old Killed by Flying O2 Cylinder in MRI
Suite
- A Unique one-off event?
- VA experience
- FDA and other reports
- Near misses unlikely to be reported
14Near Misses Or No Harm Events With MRI
- When workers dismantled an MRI machine recently
at - the University of Texas, they discovered dozens
of pens, paper clips, keys and other metal
objects clustered inside. ...
15Purpose of an Event Reporting System
- Useful data base to study systems failure points
- Many more near misses than actual bad events
- Source of data to study human recovery
- Dynamic means of understanding system operations
16Types of Errors
- Active are errors committed by those in direct
contact with the human-system interface (human
error) - Latent are the delayed consequences of technical
and organizational actions and decisions
17Types of Errors
?
- Active Errors
- Skill based
- Rule based
- Knowledge based
- Latent Errors (conditions or failures)
- Technical
- Organizational
- Other (patient/donor related and other)
18Skill-based Error
Failure in the performance of a routine task
that normally requires little conscious
effort Example locking your keys in the car
because youre distracted by
someone calling your name
19Rule-based Error
- Failure to carry out a procedure or protocol
- correctly or choosing the wrong rule
- Example not waiting your turn at a 4-way
stop sign
20Knowledge-based Error
- Failure to know what to do in a new
- situation (problem solving at conscious level)
- Example not knowing what to do
when the traffic light is out
21Types of Errors
- Active Errors
- Skill based
- Rule based
- Knowledge based
- Latent Errors (conditions or failures)
- Technical
- Organizational
- Other (patient/donor related and other)
?
22Latent Errors (conditions or failures)
- Technical
- Problems with physical items such as equipment,
software, or paper-based material - Example design flaw in software
- Organizational
- Problems resulting from organizational elements
culture, procedures, leadership decisions - Example unclear procedure
23The Titanic a Disaster
waiting to happen ...
24Titanic Latent Conditions
- Inadequate number of lifeboats
25Titanic Latent Conditions
- No transverse overheads on water tight bulkheads
26Titanic Latent Conditions
- No shake down cruise to train crew
27Titanic Latent Conditions
- No training for officers on handling of large
single rudder ships
28Titanic Latent Conditions
29Events Happen When
- Blunt end actions and decisions latent
underlying conditions -
- Sharp end actions and decisions active human
failure - Event
30The Iceberg Model In Transfusion
- 1/2,000,000 fatalities
- 1/30,000 ABO incompatible txns
- 1/12,000 incorrect units transfused
1/2000,000
1/30,000
1/12,000
Near-Miss Events
31Relationship of DSL to ESL
Risk
DSL
ESL
Information
32Experience With ASRs of BASIS
- Report rate
- 1990-1995
- gt 3X increase
-
- Severe/high risk - 1-6/93 to 1-6/95
- 2/3 decrease
DSL
INFO
ESL
RISK
33Lessons Learned From Aviation
- 5 Factors Determine Quantity/ Quality of Incident
Reports - Indemnity
- Confidentiality
- Separate from regulator
- Feedback
- Ease
Feeling of Trust
Motivation
Reason J
34Just CultureA Delicate Balancing Act
Voluntary Reporting
Discipline
Open Communication
Professional Accountability
35How Just Culture is Different
- Acknowledges that mistakes (human errors) do not
equal intent to harm - Applies reckless conduct standard
- Disciplines individuals whoknowingly put
patients safetyat risk
36Transfusion Medicine Event Report Rate
Orientation
37Causal Tree
Event
Failure side
Recovery side
and
Primary recovery action to stop adverse outcome
Primary action or decision
Primary action or decision
Antecedents
and
and
Antecedent recovery action
Antecedent recovery action
Root Cause
Root Cause
Root Cause
Codes
38Investigation
- A Transfusion Error (labeling)
39A Transfusion Error (labeling)
- Medical Technologist on the 2nd shift was
releasing blood units from quarantine to
inventory noticed an out-of-sequence transfer
label numbered on a unit of red blood cells (rbc).
40A Labeling Error
Xerox of blood unit labels
Front of unit
Back of Unit
41Failure Labeling Sequence
- Labels for each bag are to be separated by
tearing at marked brackets...
42Causal Tree
Unit of RBC almost released with out-of-sequence
transfer label
Failure side
Recovery side
and
Unit isolated until label corrected
Labeling inadequately checked
Phlebotomist tore label in wrong place
and
and
Label poor markings
2nd shift Tech. saw label error
Notified supervisor
Inadequate SOP for checking label
Label provided poor feedback
43Classification Description
- Use Eindhoven Classification Model Medical
Version for root cause coding - 20 codes divided into
- Latent (Technical, Organizational)
- Human Factors
- Other
- Aim for 3-7 root cause codes for each event, a
mixture of active and latent
44Eindhoven Classification System
- 20 codes divided in
- Technical Factors
- Organizational Factors
- Human Factors
- Knowledge Based
- Rule Based
- Skill Based
- Other Factors
- Patient Related Factors
- Unclassifiable
45Organizational (Latent)
- Organizational
- OEX External
- OK Transfer of Knowledge
- OP Protocols
- OM Management Priorities
- OC Culture
46- First Question
- Second Question
- Third Question
47Causal Tree
Unit of RBC almost released with out-of-sequence
transfer label
Failure side
Recovery side
and
Unit isolated until label corrected
Labeling inadequately checked
Phlebotomist tore label in wrong place
and
and
Label poor markings
2nd shift Tech. saw label error
Notified supervisor
Inadequate SOP for checking label
Label provided poor feedback
OP
TD
TD
HSS
48Correction of Label Error
49Event Severity Level (ESL)Actual or Potential
Level of Harm
- Level 1 ((High)
- Fatal outcome or serious injury
- Level 2 (Medium)
- Minor, transient injury
- Level 3 (Low)
- No ill effects, no harm
50Severity Level Causes
Severity Level 2
Severity Level 1
Severity Level 3
51Distribution of Causes
Petrochemical Processing Plant
Transfusion
n 563
n 1,238
523 Major Applications of Event Reporting Systems
- Modeling - New unique events
- Monitoring - Event
- Type - identifies weak points of system
- Cause - guides choice of corrective action
- Mindfulness
- Awareness of hazards
- Active engagement, Ownership
- Feedback
- Effect on safety culture
T. van derSchaaf
53MERS-TM WEB Site
www.mers-tm.net