Putting the ‘Action’ in RCA2: An Analysis of Intervention Strength after Adverse Events

Jessica A. Zerillo, Sarah Tardiff, Dorothy Flood, Lauge Sokol-Hessner, Anthony Weiss

The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety(2024)

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摘要
Background Safety event reporting and review is well established within US hospitals; but systems to ensure implementation of changes to improve patient safety are less developed. Methods Contributing factors and corrective actions for events brought to a tertiary care academic medical center's multidisciplinary hospital-level safety event review meeting were prospectively collected from 2020 to 2021. Corrective actions were tracked to completion through 2023. We retrospectively coded corrective actions by category and strength using The Veterans Affairs/ Institute for Healthcare Improvement Corrective Action Hierarchy Tool. Results In the analysis of 67 events, 15 contributing factor themes were identified and resulted in 148 corrective actions. Of these events, 85.1% (57/67) had more than one corrective action. Of the 148 corrective actions, 84 (56.8%) were rated as weak, 36 (24.3%) as intermediate, 15 (10.1%) strong, and 13 (8.8%) needed more information. The completion rate was 97.6% (for weak corrective actions), 80.6% (intermediate), and 73.3% (strong) (p < 0.0001). Discussion Safety events were often addressed with multiple corrective actions. There was an inverse relationship between intervention strength and completion, the strongest interventions with the lowest rate of completion. By integrating action strength and completion status into corrective action follow-up, health care organizations may more effectively identify and address those barriers to completing the strongest interventions that ultimately achieve high reliability.
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关键词
Medical error,Root cause analysis,Safety Management/organization & administration
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