@article{11900, keywords = {emergency medical services, medical errors, pediatrics, safety}, author = {Garth Meckler and Matthew Hansen and William Lambert and Kerth O'Brien and Caitlin Dickinson and Kathryn Dickinson and Joshua Van Otterloo and Jeanne-Marie Guise}, title = {Out-of-Hospital Pediatric Patient Safety Events: Results of the CSI Chart Review.}, abstract = {

OBJECTIVE: Studies of adult hospital patients have identified medical errors as a significant cause of morbidity and mortality. Little is known about the frequency and nature of pediatric patient safety events in the out-of-hospital setting. We sought to quantify pediatric patient safety events in EMS and identify patient, call, and care characteristics associated with potentially severe events.

METHODS: As part of the Children's Safety Initiative -EMS, expert panels independently reviewed charts of pediatric critical ambulance transports in a metropolitan area over a three-year period. Regression models were used to identify factors associated with increased risk of potentially severe safety events. Patient safety events were categorized as: Unintended injury; Near miss; Suboptimal action; Error; or Management complication ("UNSEMs") and their severity and potential preventability were assessed.

RESULTS: Overall, 265 of 378 (70.1%) unique charts contained at least one UNSEM, including 146 (32.8%) errors and 199 (44.7%) suboptimal actions. Sixty-one UNSEMs were categorized as potentially severe (23.3% of UNSEMs) and nearly half (45.3%) were rated entirely preventable. Two factors were associated with heightened risk for a severe UNSEM: (1) age 29 days to 11 months (OR 3.3, 95% CI 1.25-8.68); (2) cases requiring resuscitation (OR 3.1, 95% CI 1.16-8.28). Severe UNSEMs were disproportionately higher among cardiopulmonary arrests (8.5% of cases, 34.4% of severe UNSEMs).

CONCLUSIONS: During high-risk out-of-hospital care of pediatric patients, safety events are common, potentially severe, and largely preventable. Infants and those requiring resuscitation are important areas of focus to reduce out-of-hospital pediatric patient safety events.

}, year = {2018}, journal = {Prehosp Emerg Care}, volume = {22}, pages = {290-299}, month = {12/2018}, issn = {1545-0066}, doi = {10.1080/10903127.2017.1371261}, language = {eng}, }