Title: A Qualitative Study of Nurses
1A Qualitative Study of Nurses Experience of
Clinical Incident Error Reporting
- Fiona Donaldson-Myles MSc RGN RM
- Supervisor of Midwives
- SSAFA Forces Help
2 3(No Transcript)
4- It is a key organisational aim to ensure clinical
incidents are reported, lessons learned and
findings disseminated to improve patient care
5- A better understanding of how staff feel when
they have been involved in reporting an error
will help develop an effective reporting and
learning culture
6- A clinical incident reporting system should
- Capture adverse incidents and near misses
- Give staff support and have their confidence.
- Encourage learning and improve patient safety
7The second victim - cost of clinical incidents to
carers
- Doctors
- Inability to share feelings
- Feelings of guilt, remorse, helplessness
- Lack of institutional mechanisms for support
- Defensive changes
8The second victim - cost of clinical incidents to
carers
- Nurses
- Similar emotions to doctor
- Better informal support
- Fearful of arbitrary disciplinary action
- Mainly medication errors studied
9Study Aim
- To obtain and analyse rich data on the experience
of nurses involved in reporting clinical
incidents - To gain insight into how the process was managed
- To identify factors that foster a reflective
environment and give staff confidence to report
adverse events
10Methodology
- Qualitative phenomenological study
- Participants identified from anonymised first
person incident reports - Informed consent, written information, 3rd party
introduction - Semi-structured interview tool
- Taped interviews
- Grounded theory approach
11Demographic Data of Respondents
- Number invited to participate 35
- Number who agreed to participate 18
- Number of actual participants 15
- Average age (years) 42
(range 32 50) - Nursing grades
I -1, H -2, G -3, F -2, E -6, D-1 - Average years in practice 20
(range 2 31) - Clinical area
Acute medicine 5 -
Care of elderly 3 -
Community hospital 2 -
Oncology/palliative 2 -
Nurse practitioner 2 -
Specialist nurse 1
12Six key themes revealed
- Nurses expectations of management
- Motivation to report
- Effects on nurses feelings emotions
- The need for support
- Learning from mistakes
- Views on patient involvement
13 Expectations of Management
- Nurses felt managerial feedback insufficient
- Nurses wanted to know if any further action was
being taken involving them or to prevent
recurrence - Copy of report inadequate
- Needed closure on episode
- Did not want copy of report freely available to
others
14Expectations of Management
- They dealt with it at ward level. I am happy
with that and they said it was the end of the
matter. - I have got a very supportive ward manager, we
discussed it, I had to write a report to the
people who deal with risk management and the ward
manager told me it was the end of the matter. - I am hoping that that is it now, and that it is
finished. I do not know for certain how far
management are taking it. - I suppose no news is good news.
15 Motivation to Report
- Nurses want to do their best for patients
- Want to prevent same mistakes happening again
- Not convinced enough being done in response to
report - Not involved enough in rectifying situation
- Report can clarify what actually happened
16Motivation to Report
- I think it is important to find out why things
happen - It needed to be addressed to prevent the same
thing happening again - Its happened on many occasions since, but it
doesnt seem to be taken seriously - I knew it was a mistake. I was comfortable to
report it, but I wanted it written down the way
it really happened
17 Effects on Nurses Feelings and Emotions
- Thirteen out of fifteen nurses described personal
impact in very strong terms - Used phrases such as
- feeling sick
- panic stricken
- never feeling the same again
18Effects on Nurses Feelings and Emotions
- Strong negative feelings regardless of outcome
- Primary incidents - blamed themselves
- Secondary incidents - feelings of powerlessness
- Negative feelings related to
- type of incident
- how much early support received
- Whether still felt trusted by colleagues
19Effects on Nurses Feelings and Emotions
- I was absolutely gutted about the thought that I
had hurt him. He was quite poorly and didnt
really know, but it still upsets me - The patient was not adversely affected, but the
nurse was absolutely devastated
20 Need for Support
- Need to talk to someone knowledgeable
- Explore issues and relieve feelings
- Face-to-face preferable but telephone and written
response helped keep feelings in perspective - Only nursing / medical family members helpful
- Inadequate support led to unresolved feelings of
distress
21Need for Support
- I have got a very supportive ward manager. We
discussed it with her and that was very good. - There was nobody I could talk to. My manager
was not available and everyone was busy. There
was nobody to give me any reassurance or an
explanation. - I did not have that much support. I mean,
people realised I wasnt happy, you know, but
they did not sit me down and say, look, we need
to talk this over.
22Suggestions for providing immediate support
- 24 hour availability of senior nurse / risk
manager - Telephone helpline
- Protected time for clinical supervision
23 Learning from Mistakes
- Despite negative feelings, viewed reporting
process as a learning episode - Reassessment / training helped regain confidence
and trust - Became more cautious about tasks taken for
granted - Became more assertive
- Wanted information regarding tracking trends and
corporate lessons learned
24Learning from Mistakes
- we all make mistakes, we learn, get through them
and move on - I check, check, double check, triple check, Im
obsessive really now
25 Views on Patient Involvement
- Nurses felt
- Errors should be disclosed to patients more
frequently - Patients coped well with open dialogue
- Less likely to take further action
- Could contribute to more realistic patient
expectations
26Views on Patient Involvement
- I think it would be nice if the patient got some
formal feedback. I think an apology or an
explanation would have been helpful and help
acknowledge the discomfort and distress he was
put through. - I think I should have told her. Once they know
the truth and you say you are sorry, on the whole
they are happy
27Conclusions
- Motivation to report was to prevent similar
occurrence - Frustrated by inadequate managerial feedback
- Supported at ward level, but not higher
- Strong personal and professional impact
- Immediate support, clear communication and
feedback facilitated movement to learning phase - Consensus that incidents should be discussed more
with patients - Overwhelmingly rejected system of incident book
stored on ward
28Limitations
- Small study / discrete setting
- Findings could reflect organisational, regional,
national characteristics - May not be generalisable
- Participants relatively old and experienced
29Recommendations
- More should be done to reduce negative
psychological and professional impact on nurses - Devise a system which gives vital early support
- 24 hour helpline
- 24 hour availability of senior nurse/risk manager
- Extension of clinical supervision
- Keep nurses informed of organisational action
- Discontinue incident book system
- Widen debate on extent to which information on
errors should be shared with patients
30SUPPORT AND COMMUNICATION
SUPPORT AND COMMUNICATION
- SUPPORT AND COMMUNICATION
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