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The PSNet Collection: All Content

The AHRQ PSNet Collection comprises an extensive selection of resources relevant to the patient safety community. These resources come in a variety of formats, including literature, research, tools, and Web sites. Resources are identified using the National Library of Medicine’s Medline database, various news and content aggregators, and the expertise of the AHRQ PSNet editorial and technical teams.

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Displaying 1 - 20 of 286 Results

Dorset, UK:  Health Services Safety Investigations Body; October 2023.

Safety management systems (SMS) are employed in many high-risk industries, yet are not fully adopted in health care. This investigation report discusses the core safety elements of an SMS (policy, risk management, assurance, and promotion), how they are defined in a wide range of industries, and how they might be systemically embedded in the care environment to support safety culture, accountability, and maturity.

Washington DC; VA Office of the Inspector General; October 31, 2023; Report no. 22-03599-07.

Disclosure failures detract from learning, appropriate incident examination, and safe care delivery. This report examined factors contributing to poor disclosure practices associated with the care of three patients. Lack of report submission, uninitiated root cause analysis, and inadequate documentation were process weaknesses highlighted by the review. 

Anaesth Intensive Care. 2023;51(6):372-421.

Centralized de-identified reports of patient safety events serve a core purpose for learning and improvement. This article collection contains research drawn from the Australian/New Zealand webAIRS database. Data reviewed include cesarean and pediatric regional anesthesia incidents submitted to webAIRS over a 13-year period.
Munn LT, Lynn MR, Knafl GJ, et al. J Res Nurs. 2023;28:354-364.
Nursing team dynamics can influence safety culture and willingness so speak up about errors and safety concerns. This survey of over 650 nurses and nurse managers underscored the importance of leader inclusiveness, safety climate, and psychological safety in cultivating speaking up behaviors among nursing team members.
Kavanagh KT, Cormier LE. Medicine (Baltimore). 2023;102:e35095.
Primary care plays an important role in identifying, avoiding and mitigating patient safety issues. This report highlights several patient safety priorities and how small (<10 providers) primary care practices can promote safe practice and outcomes for their patients.
Bagot KL, McInnes E, Mannion R, et al. BMC Health Serv Res. 2023;23:1012.
Unprofessional behavior can have a detrimental effect on coworkers, culture, and patient safety. This qualitative study presents perspectives of middle managers in hospitals that implemented a program allowing and encouraging workers to report unprofessional, as well as positive, behavior. Themes included staying silent but active (e.g., avoiding the unprofessional colleague), history and hierarchy, and double-edged swords (e.g., pros and cons of anonymous reporting).
Foster M, MHA BS, Mazur L. BMJ Open Qual. 2023;12:e002284.
Healthcare leadership walkarounds (LWs) involve organizational leaders visiting hospital wards to hear directly from frontline staff about concerns and what is going well. This systematic review describes the impact of LWs on organizational and patient outcomes. Most studies (11 out of 12) measured organizational or clinical outcomes. Organizational outcomes included staff perception of safety culture, near miss reports, teamwork, and feeling heard. Only one study investigated the association between LWs and clinical outcomes; in that study, catheter-associated urinary tract infections decreased following implementation of LW.
van Moll C, Egberts TCG, Wagner C, et al. J Patient Saf. 2023;19:573-579.
Diagnostic testing errors can contribute to delays in diagnosis and to serious patient harm. Researchers analyzed 327 voluntary incident reports from one medical center in the Netherlands and found that diagnostic testing errors most commonly occurred during the pre-analytic phase (77%), and were predominantly caused by human factors (59%). The researchers found that these diagnostic testing errors contributed to a potential diagnostic error in 60% of cases.
Kirkup B, Titcombe J. BMJ. 2023;382:1972.
The latent nature of failure in health care is enabled by organizational inability or unwillingness to listen and respond to the concerns of patients, families, and clinicians. This commentary discusses a rare criminal event in the British National Health System (NHS) and the factors that allowed continued criminal activity to occur over time.

Peterson M. Los Angeles Times. September 5, 2023.

Safe practice in community pharmacy is challenged by production pressure, workforce shortages, and multitasking. This story examined the mistakes made at major retail pharmacy chains in California. It provides examples perpetrated across the industry to target universal areas of needed improvement and potential strategies to address them.
Wallin A, Ringdal M, Ahlberg K, et al. Scand J Caring Sci. 2023;37:414-423.
Numerous factors can hinder safe radiology practices, such as communication failures and image interpretation errors. Based on semi-structured interviews with 17 radiologists in Sweden, this study identified 20 themes at the individual-, organization-, technology-, task-and environment-levels describing factors supporting patient safety in radiology. Factors described by participants included the use of standardized tools and work routines (e.g., checklists), handoffs, and incident reporting systems.
Griffeth EM, Gajic O, Schueler N, et al. J Patient Saf. 2023;19:422-428.
Voluntary reporting is an important tool for institutions to identify latent safety threats before they reach the patient but barriers to reporting result in low reporting rates. This quality improvement (QI) project aimed to increase near miss and error reporting within 9 intensive care units (ICU) in one healthcare system. After identifying barriers to reporting (e.g., user difficulty with online reporting system), a multi-faceted intervention was developed and implemented. Error reporting increased in 6 of 9 ICUs following implementation, with a significant increase in near miss reports.
Hibbert PD, Molloy CJ, Schultz TJ, et al. Int J Qual Health Care. 2023;35:mzad056.
Accurate and reliable detection and measurement of adverse events remains challenging. This systematic review examined the difference in adverse events detected using the Global Trigger Tool compared to those detected via incident reporting systems. In 12 of the 14 included studies, less than 10% of adverse events detected using the Global Trigger Tool were also found in corresponding incident reporting systems. The authors of the review emphasize the importance of using multiple approaches and sources of patient safety data to enhance adverse event detection.
Alfred MC, Wilson D, DeForest E, et al. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2023;Epub Jun 15.
In the United States, women and birthing people of color experience disproportionately high rates of mortality and severe maternal morbidity (SMM). Researchers analyzed two years of incident reports (IR) to ascertain potential system issues contributing to SMM and racial/ethnic disparities at one hospital. Non-Hispanic Black individuals were over-represented in IRs, but there were no statistically significant differences in harm level.
Cho H, Steege LM, Arsenault Knudsen ÉN. Res Nurs Health. 2023;46:445-453.
Psychological safety, the feeling of confidence that speaking up will not result in punishment or shame, can have a positive impact on both patient and healthcare worker outcomes. Conducted in 2021, this study involved 867 hospital nurses in the United States. Nurses with higher psychological safety were more satisfied with their jobs, less likely to leave in the next year, and reported higher patient safety ratings.
Øyri SF, Søreide K, Søreide E, et al. BMJ Open Qual. 2023;12:e002368.
Reporting and learning from adverse events are core components of patient safety. In this qualitative study involving 15 surgeons from four academic hospitals in Norway, researchers identified several individual and structural factors influencing serious adverse events as well as both positive and negative implications of transparency regarding adverse events. The authors highlight the importance of systemic learning and structural changes to foster psychological safety and create space for safe discussions after adverse events.
Lainidi O, Jendeby MK, Montgomery A, et al. Front Psychiatry. 2023;14:111579.
Encouraging frontline healthcare workers to voice concerns is an important component of safety culture. This systematic review of 76 qualitative studies explored how speaking up behaviors and silence are measured in healthcare. The authors identified several evidence gaps, including a reliance on self-reported data and overrepresentation of certain demographic characteristics.
Delpino R, Lees-Deutsch L, Solanki B. BMJ Open Qual. 2023;12:e002047.
Following the 2013 release of the Report of The Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust inquiry, National Health Service (NHS) Trusts have made substantial efforts to increase staffs’ willingness to speak up about patient safety concerns. One method is the creation of confidential resources who provide staff support: Freedom to Speak Up Guardians (FTSUG) and Confidential Contacts (CC). This study explored perspectives of FTSUG and CC on how they best support staff and how leaders can encourage speaking up behavior.
Caspi H, Perlman Y, Westreich S. Safety Sci. 2023;164:106147.
Near-misses or “good catches” are incidents that could have resulted in patient harm but did not due to it being caught at the last minute or through sheer luck. Reporting near-misses can help organizations learn and enact changes if necessary, but near-misses are not frequently reported. This study presents enablers and barriers to reporting near-misses.