1 / 25

Reporting on patient safety and medical errors

Reporting on patient safety and medical errors. Richard Smith Editor, BMJ www.bmj.com/talks. What I want to talk about. A picture A story Why did we forget? “The report” The role of medical journals The role of the mass media The role of the web The role of the WMA. A picture.

saima
Télécharger la présentation

Reporting on patient safety and medical errors

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reporting on patient safety and medical errors Richard Smith Editor, BMJ www.bmj.com/talks

  2. What I want to talk about • A picture • A story • Why did we forget? • “The report” • The role of medical journals • The role of the mass media • The role of the web • The role of the WMA

  3. A picture

  4. A story

  5. There’s nothing new about this • “First, do no harm”

  6. Why then did we forget it? • We didn’t understand the extent of the harm • We were too busy concentrating on benefit • It’s painful to think about harm • “There but for the grace of God go I” • We thought about it in terms of culpability and didn’t know how to respond

  7. “The report”: Institute of Medicine Report • To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System • Put safety to the top of the US health agenda • Every country needs one

  8. The role of medical journals

  9. What journals can’t do • Make change happen straight away: “Words on paper don’t change things” • Tell people what to think

  10. What journals can do • Disturb, stir up, encourage debate • Set agendas: “Tell people what to think about” • Legitimise: “If the NEJM is talking about safety it must be important”

  11. The role of medical journals • Reporting scientific data • how many errors? • what type? • why do they happen? • what should be done about them? • Raising consciousness • Setting the agenda • Educating

  12. Reporting error: USA • Harvard Medical Practice Study • Published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 1991 • In 3.7% of hospital admissions an adverse event led to harm

  13. Reporting error: Australia • Australian study • Published in the Medical Journal of Australia in 1995 • An adverse event occurred in 16.6% of admissions

  14. Not reporting error: UK • “If the [US] results apply in then about …45 000 may die in part because of the [adverse] event…Every country needs such a study…” • BMJ editorial, 1990

  15. Violet Vanbrugh

  16. Setting the agendaRaising consciousnessEducating

  17. How to reduce error • Quality improvement reports • Context • Problem • Measures of improvement • Information gathering • Strategy for change • Effects of change • Next steps

  18. Journals specifically concerned with safety

  19. The role of the mass media • Reporting cases to the world: the world is interested • Reporting data • Explaining error: Why does it happen? What can be done? • Generating political commitment for improvement

  20. The role of the web • Enormous potential for sharing • High quality information • Tools • Experiences • Contacts • Many websites are appearing and will appear

  21. Purpose of Qualityhealthcare.org • Help improve the quality of health care worldwide • Be easily accessible free or at very low cost • Provide trusted content and tools to improve healthcare • Put experts throughout the world in touch with one another

  22. The role of the WMA • Raise consciousness • Convince member associations that they should be thinking about this issue and doing something • Put them in touch with people who can help them • Produce a grand statement that commits members to improving patient safety

More Related