Temporal Trends in Rates of Patient Harm Resulting from Medical Care
Boston Children's Hospital · Harvard University · +5 more institutions
Abstract
In the 10 years since publication of the Institute of Medicine's report To Err Is Human, extensive efforts have been undertaken to improve patient safety. The success of these efforts remains unclear.
We conducted a retrospective study of a stratified random sample of 10 hospitals in North Carolina. A total of 100 admissions per quarter from January 2002 through December 2007 were reviewed in random order by teams of nurse reviewers both within the hospitals (internal reviewers) and outside the hospitals (external reviewers) with the use of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement's Global Trigger Tool for Measuring Adverse Events. Suspected harms that were identified on initial review were evaluated by two independent physician reviewers. We evaluated changes in the rates of harm, using a random-effects Poisson regression model with adjustment for hospital-level clustering, demographic characteristics of patients, hospital service, and high-risk conditions.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 150.99
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 29
Authors
6- CPChristopher P. LandriganCorresponding
Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard University, Brigham and Women's Hospital
- GPGareth Parry
Institute for Healthcare Improvement, Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard University
- CBCatherine B. Bones
Institute for Healthcare Improvement
- AHAndrew Hackbarth
Institute for Healthcare Improvement, Frederick S. Pardee RAND Graduate School
- DADonald A. Goldmann
Harvard University, Boston Children's Hospital, Institute for Healthcare Improvement
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Poisson regression
- Confidence interval
- Patient safety
- Health care
- Emergency medicine
- Family medicine
- Stratified sampling
- Good health and well-being