Human errors in a multidisciplinary intensive care unit: a 1-year prospective study

被引:0
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作者
David Bracco
Jean-Baptiste Favre
Bruno Bissonnette
Jean-Blaise Wasserfallen
Jean-Pierre Revelly
Patrick Ravussin
René Chioléro
机构
[1] Department of Anaesthesiology and Critical Care,
[2] Sion Hospital,undefined
[3] Sion,undefined
[4] Switzerland,undefined
[5] Department of Anaesthesiology,undefined
[6] Hospital for Sick Children,undefined
[7] University of Toronto,undefined
[8] Toronto,undefined
[9] Ontario,undefined
[10] Canada,undefined
[11] Medical Direction,undefined
[12] Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois,undefined
[13] Lausanne,undefined
[14] Switzerland,undefined
[15] Surgical Intensive Care Unit,undefined
[16] Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois,undefined
[17] Lausanne,undefined
[18] Switzerland,undefined
[19] Present address: Surgical Intensive Care Unit,undefined
[20] University Hospital,undefined
[21] 1011 Lausanne,undefined
[22] Switzerland,undefined
[23] e-mail: David.Bracco@Span.Ch,undefined
[24] Tel.: +41-21-3142923,undefined
[25] Fax: +41-21-3142904,undefined
来源
Intensive Care Medicine | 2001年 / 27卷
关键词
Human factors Length of stay Intensive care units Quality of health care Quality assurance, health Care Quality indicators, health care;
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摘要
Objectives: To determine the incidence and identify risk factors of critical incidents in an ICU. Design: Prospective observational study of consecutive patients admitted over 1 year to an ICU. Critical incidents were recorded using predefined criteria. Their causes and consequences were analysed. The causes were classified as technical failure, patient's underlying disease, or human errors (subclassified as planning, execution, or surveillance). The consequences were classified as lethal, leading to sequelae, prolonging the ICU stay, minor, or without consequences. The correlation between critical incidents and specific factors including patient's diagnosis and severity score, use of monitoring and therapeutic modalities was analysed by uni- and multivariate analysis. Setting: An 11-bed multidisciplinary ICU in a non-university teaching hospital. Patients: 1024 consecutive patients admitted to the ICU. Intervention: None. Measurementsandmainresults: The median length of ICU stay by the 1024 patients was 1.9 days. Of the 777 critical incidents reported 2% were due to technical failure and 67% to secondary to underlying disease. There were 241 human errors (31%) in 161 patients, evenly distributed among planning (n=75), execution (n=88), and surveillance (n=78). One error was lethal, two led to sequelae, 26% prolonged ICU stay, and 57% were minor and 16% without consequence. Errors with significant consequences were related mainly to planning. Human errors prolonged ICU stay by 425 patient-days, amounting to 15% of ICU time. Readmitted patients had more frequent and more severe critical incidents than primarily admitted patients. Conclusions: Critical incidents add morbidity, workload, and financial burden. A substantial proportion of them are related to human factors with dire consequences. Efforts must focus on timely, appropriate care to avoid planning and execution mishaps at the beginning of the ICU stay; surveillance intensity must be maintained, specially after the fourth day.
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页码:137 / 145
页数:8
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