@article{3252, keywords = {adverse events, human factors, incident reporting and analysis, medical errors, patient safety, risk management}, author = {Peter D. Hibbert and Frances Healey and Tara Lamont and William M. Marela and Bruce Warner and William B. Runciman}, title = {Patient safety's missing link: using clinical expertise to recognize, respond to and reduce risks at a population level.}, abstract = {

INTRODUCTION: Although incident reporting systems are widespread in health care as a strategy to reduce harm to patients, the focus has been on reporting incidents rather than responding to them. Systems containing large numbers of incidents are uniquely placed to raise awareness of, and then characterize and respond to infrequent, but significant risks. The aim of this paper is to outline a framework for the surveillance of such risks, their systematic analysis, and for the development and dissemination of population-based preventive and corrective strategies using clinical and human factors expertise.

REQUIREMENTS FOR A POPULATION-LEVEL RESPONSE: The framework outlines four system requirements: to report incidents; to aggregate them; to support and conduct a risk surveillance, review and response process; and to disseminate recommendations. Personnel requirements include a non-hierarchical multidisciplinary team comprising clinicians and subject-matter and human factors experts to provide interpretation and high-level judgement from a range of perspectives. The risk surveillance, review and response process includes searching of large incident and other databases for how and why things have gone wrong, narrative analysis by clinical experts, consultation with the health care sector, and development and pilot testing of corrective strategies. Criteria for deciding which incidents require a population-level response are outlined.

DISCUSSION: The incremental cost of a population-based response function is modest compared with the 'reporting' element. Combining clinical and human factors expertise and a systematic approach underpins the creation of credible risk identification processes and the development of preventive and corrective strategies.

}, year = {2016}, journal = {Int J Qual Health Care}, volume = {28}, pages = {114-21}, month = {02/2016}, issn = {1464-3677}, doi = {10.1093/intqhc/mzv091}, language = {eng}, }