jueves, 12 de noviembre de 2009

Integration of prospective and retrospective methods for risk analysis in hospitals - AHRQ Patient Safety Network


Integration of prospective and retrospective methods for risk analysis in hospitals.
Kessels-Habraken M, Van der Schaaf T, De Jonge J, Rutte C, Kerkvliet K. Int J Qual Health Care. 2009 Oct 14; [Epub ahead of print].

This study used both prospective and retrospective methods of analyzing risk to demonstrate the additive value of both in setting patient safety priorities.


abrir aquí para acceder al documento AHRQ completo:
AHRQ Patient Safety Network

Int J Qual Health Care. 2009 Dec;21(6):427-432. Epub 2009 Oct 14.

Integration of prospective and retrospective methods for risk analysis in hospitals.
Kessels-Habraken M, Van der Schaaf T, De Jonge J, Rutte C, Kerkvliet K.

Address reprint requests to: M. Kessels-Habraken. m.kessels@infoland.nl.


OBJECTIVE: /st> To explore how hospital management could gain a better picture of risks to support them in setting priorities for patient safety. METHODS: and SETTING: /st> This study deals with the combined application of prospective and retrospective methods for risk analysis on two units of a Dutch general hospital. In the prospective analyses, employees identified and assessed possible risks in selected processes. In the retrospective analyses, incidents were reported by employees and subsequently investigated. The methods were integrated by using information from retrospective incident reports for prospective risk identification and assessment, and by matching their categorization schemes. Two evaluation forms provided insight into the perceived usefulness of the methods and their integration. RESULTS: and CONCLUSIONS: /st> For both units, the prospective and retrospective analyses resulted in divergent overviews of risks in terms of nature and magnitude, which suggests that one or both methods were subject to biases. Findings from the evaluation forms showed that both methods were perceived as useful and that triangulation provided additional insight into risks. Due to the convergent evidence, triangulation of prospective and retrospective methods can provide hospital management and frontline staff with a more complete and less biased picture of risks. An integrative approach might be advantageous in terms of efficiency of analysis, setting priorities for patient safety and improving the methods themselves.

PMID: 19828551 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

abrir aquí:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19828551

No hay comentarios: