Article Text
Abstract
Introduction: Adverse events in hospitals constitute a serious problem with grave consequences. Many studies have been conducted to gain an insight into this problem, but a general overview of the data is lacking. We performed a systematic review of the literature on in-hospital adverse events.
Methods: A formal search of Embase, Cochrane and Medline was performed. Studies were reviewed independently for methodology, inclusion and exclusion criteria and endpoints. Primary endpoints were incidence of in-hospital adverse events and percentage of preventability. Secondary endpoints were adverse event outcome and subdivision by provider of care, location and type of event.
Results: Eight studies including a total of 74 485 patient records were selected. The median overall incidence of in-hospital adverse events was 9.2%, with a median percentage of preventability of 43.5%. More than half (56.3%) of patients experienced no or minor disability, whereas 7.4% of events were lethal. Operation- (39.6%) and medication-related (15.1%) events constituted the majority. We present a summary of evidence-based interventions aimed at these categories of events.
Conclusions: Adverse events during hospital admission affect nearly one out of 10 patients. A substantial part of these events are preventable. Since a large proportion of the in-hospital events are operation- or drug-related, interventions aimed at preventing these events have the potential to make a substantial difference.
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Adverse events (AEs) in hospitals are now widely agreed to be a serious problem, annually killing more people than breast cancer or AIDS.1 An AE is usually defined as an unintended injury or complication resulting in prolonged hospital stay, disability at the time of discharge or death and caused by healthcare management rather than by the patient’s underlying disease process.23 Aside from the direct harm to the patient, AEs are a considerable financial burden to the healthcare system. In 1999, it was estimated that the total costs of preventable AEs in the USA lie between $17 billion and $29 billion annually.4
In recent years, the focus in thinking about AEs has shifted from the person approach—blaming individuals for errors—to the systems approach. The systems approach assumes that people will make mistakes, and that the system that surrounds them should provide a safety net for these mistakes. Therefore, efforts to eliminate AEs should be directed towards a particular system.5 This new approach has shifted the focus of the debate on AEs from the legal consequences associated with personal responsibility, to a more constructive point of view, clearing the way for thinking about solutions.
In the aftermath of the 2001 Institute of Medicine report “To err is human,”1 many large studies have been performed concerning AEs, some of them nationwide. Although many of these studies used similar methods, they report substantially different incidences. A general overview of data on in-hospital AEs is lacking.
To make the important step towards solutions, it is necessary to gain a more detailed understanding of this problem: what percentage of events is preventable, where do the majority of events happen and which type of event is the most frequent? This will enable identification of categories of AEs that are most susceptible to interventions to improve patient safety.
To gain an insight into the overall incidence, preventability, outcome and subdivision by location, provider and type of in-hospital AEs and the evidence related to relevant patient safety interventions, we conducted a systematic review of available data from the literature.
METHODS
Literature search
Two authors (ENV, MAB) independently performed a formal computer-assisted search of the medical databases Medline (January 1966 to February 2007), Cochrane and Embase (January 1980 to February 2007). Keywords used were “adverse events” and “preventable.” Clinical studies published in peer-reviewed journals in the English language were identified. A manual cross-reference search of the eligible papers was performed to identify additional relevant articles.
Selection
In order to be able to reliably compare the data, we defined an AE as follows: an unintended injury or complication resulting in prolonged hospital stay, disability at the time of discharge or death and caused by healthcare management rather than by the patient’s underlying disease process. All studies that used this or a similar definition to evaluate the incidence of AEs in adult hospital patients and that included a minimum of 1000 patient records were eligible for inclusion. Studies that evaluated errors without linking them to outcomes and studies relying only on computerised screening data were excluded. Studies that evaluated specific types of AEs only (for example, adverse drug events only) and studies that evaluated specific populations (for example, ICU patients only) were excluded. No abstract publications without subsequent full-text published data were used. Disagreements about inclusion were resolved in a consensus meeting.
Validity assessment
Two authors (ENV, MAB) independently assessed selected studies for methodology and endpoints. Information was extracted on the methods of data collection (prospective or retrospective), record selection and review, the time frame of included AEs and recorded interobserver variability. Primary endpoints were the incidence of AEs and the percentage of preventability. Secondary endpoints were adverse event outcome and subdivision by provider of care, location and type of event.
Data collection
Data on incidence of AEs, preventability, outcome, location, provider of care and type of event were extracted. Whenever possible, raw data were used, and percentages were calculated. Extrapolations to state or country levels were not reproduced. Data on outcome, provider of care, location and type of event were grouped into common categories that the majority of articles used.
Interventions
After analysis of the data yielded the categories of events that were responsible for the majority of adverse events, a computer-assisted search of Medline was performed to identify interventions relating to these categories of events. Only studies with a level of evidence of one or two were included.
Statistical analysis
Medians and interquartile ranges (IQR) of incidence, preventability, and the different categories of outcome, location, provider of care and type of event were calculated using Statistical Package for the Social Sciences version 12.0 (SPSS, Chicago).
RESULTS
Article retrieval
The initial search yielded 257 articles (fig 1). After reviewing the titles and abstracts, 228 articles were excluded. These articles included reviews, studies on specific types of AEs only, for example adverse drug events, and studies in specific populations, for example children or ICU patients. Of the remaining 29 studies, another 17 were excluded after reviewing the full article. Three of these studies applied a different definition of an AE; one study used an observational approach and recorded only errors without linking them to outcomes;6 the other two studies used a computer-assisted approach to screen a large number of patient records for certain codes denoting complications.78 Three studies were excluded because of an insufficient number of patient records; one of these studies used retrospective record review;9 the other studies would otherwise have been excluded due to methodological designs that differed from the large record review studies.1011 Five studies presented data of patient populations already included in other publications,12–16 and six studies presented insufficient data on the primary endpoint.17–22
Included studies
We included 12 articles in the review. Of these articles, four reported additional data of patient populations that were already included.23–26 In this review, these articles were considered as one study together with the article first published, resulting in eight reviewed studies.
Study characteristics
Characteristics of included studies are presented in tables 1 and 2. A total of 74 485 patient records were derived from the included studies. The number of hospitals per study ranged from 1 to 51 and the median number of patient records reviewed per study was 5162 (IQR 1542–14 569). All studies used a two-stage retrospective record review technique. Records were first screened by trained nurses; when positive for certain trigger criteria27 (for example an unplanned readmission, an adverse drug reaction or a hospital-acquired infection), the records were then reviewed by a physician to determine whether or not an AE had occurred. In two studies, the data from this approach were compared with voluntary reporting data.2829 Whether or not an event was caused by healthcare management (causality judgement) was measured on a six-point scale in six studies; a score of ⩾2330 or ⩾4231–33 was considered positive. The other two studies did not specify the details of the causality judgement.2829 Of the six studies that gave a judgement on preventability, four used a similar six-point scale; a score of ⩾4 was considered preventable.3242831 The other two studies did not specify the details of the preventability judgement.2933
Incidence, preventability and outcome
The data on incidence, preventability and outcome of case record review studies are shown in table 3. The median incidence of AEs was 9.2% (IQR 4.6–12.4%). The median percentage of AEs that was judged preventable was 43.5% (IQR 39.4–49.6%). Two studies judged negligence instead of preventability,232 which was defined as AEs caused by a failure to meet standards reasonably expected of the average physician or institution. Negligence data were not considered in the calculation of the median percentage of preventability.
Outcome data were divided into five categories: no or minor disability (resolved within 1 month), temporary disability (resolved within 1 year), permanent disability, death and unknown. The median percentage of AEs that led to no or minor disability was 56.3% (IQR 51.4–62.8%). Permanent disability was found in 7.0% (IQR 6.1–11.0%) of patients experiencing an AE, while 7.4% (IQR 4.7–14.2%) of AEs caused the death of the patient.
Providers of care
Providers of care were divided into three groups (table 4): surgical, containing all surgical professions, anaesthesiology, gynaecology and obstetrics; medicine, containing all internal specialties and paediatrics; and “other,” containing for example family practice, nursing and emergency medicine. The median proportion of AEs associated with surgical providers was 58.4% (IQR 54.5–70.9%) versus 24.1% (IQR 18.7–40.4%) for medical providers.
Locations
Table 5 shows the various locations where AEs took place. For all AEs, 80.8% (IQR 75.6–83.2%) were encountered in hospital, versus 14.9% (IQR 12.9–18.7%) out of hospital before admission or after discharge. The majority of events were seen in the operating room (41.0% (IQR 39.5–45.8%)) or the patient’s room (24.5% (IQR 21.6–26.5%)). By contrast, only 3.1% (IQR 2.7–3.5%) of AEs were located in the complex environment of the intensive care unit. The emergency room accounted for 3.0% (IQR 2.9–3.0%) of AEs.
Type of event
Finally, the AEs were classified according to type of event (table 6). In three studies an AE could be attributed to more than one category,32431 whereas in the other studies, the types of events were mutually exclusive. Importantly, approximately 50% of AEs are operation- or drug-related: 39.6% (IQR 31.5–50.2%) and 15.1% (11.9–20.4%), respectively. By contrast, anaesthesia-related events formed only 2.0% (IQR 1.2–3.7%) of AEs.
Patient safety interventions
Table 7 gives an overview of the top level (level of evidence 1 and 2) of evidence-based interventions directed towards the major types of adverse events: operation- and medication-related events. The operation-related interventions include a number of medical interventions such as perioperative beta-blockade and antibiotic prophylaxis. In addition, interventions such as training programmes for laparoscopy and a medical emergency team are mentioned. The medication-related practices include bar code technology and computerised physician order entry systems.
DISCUSSION
We conducted a systematic review to gain an insight into the overall incidence, preventability and outcome of adverse events and added information about location, provider and type of events. Despite the enormous amount of recent attention for patient safety, such systematic compiling of all available evidence on the subject is lacking to date.
This systematic review included eight studies from the USA, Canada, the UK, Australia and New Zealand. The median overall incidence of adverse events was 9.2%, and almost half of these events were regarded as preventable. The majority of events were associated with a surgical care provider, and more than half of events were operation- or drug-related.
Although all included studies used the same definition, incidences of adverse events varied considerably. In 2000, a comparison was made between the Utah/Colorado study (incidence 3.2%) and the Australian study (incidence 16.6%), and a number of possible reasons for this difference were provided.4748 There were a number of methodological differences between the studies, such as a lower threshold for defining causation in the Australian study and inclusion of some types of events in one study that were excluded in the other. Aside from these differences, the authors suggest that the disparity might be due to differences in quantity and methods of documentation between Australia and the USA, and different perspectives of the two studies (medicolegal versus quality-improvement). These considerations may also apply to the other studies included in this review. For example, both studies that were performed from a medicolegal point of view232 reported considerably lower incidences than the other studies, performed from a quality-improvement point of view.328–31 33 Furthermore, not all studies employed the same time frame for included events. Out-of-hospital events were included in only a few studies. Some studies only recorded one adverse event per patient record, whereas others did not enforce this restriction. These methodological differences may well, at least in part, account for the difference between the recorded incidences.
Retrospective record review has been criticised for a number of reasons. As it relies heavily on patient records, it is dependent on the quality of documentation. If adverse events are not documented properly, they will not be detected by this method. Furthermore, only those adverse events are detected that result in one of the trigger criteria of the review method. Finally, in retrospective record review, the interobserver variability is very high, especially with regard to the judgements on causality and preventability.49 The studies included in this review show moderate interobserver agreement scores, illustrating this drawback of retrospective record review.
Aside from the fact that the conclusions from this review are based solely on retrospective record review studies, and as such, most likely represent an underestimation of the problem, there are a number of other limitations of this systematic review, the most important one being the heterogeneity of the included studies. Although most studies used roughly the same methods, the details differed considerably. For example, the studies from Australia and New Zealand applied a lower threshold for causation than the other studies. The time frame of included events also differed between studies: the studies from the United States did not include events discovered after discharge, whereas the other included studies did. Because differences in methodology and perspective may lead to different numbers of recorded AEs,4748 we must proceed with caution when drawing conclusions from the combined data from these studies. Apart from differences in methodology between the included studies, our strict inclusion criteria potentially may have caused us to exclude interesting studies. The three studies we excluded because of an insufficient number of patient records evaluated, when combined, 1607 records, amounting to 2% of all records included in this systematic review (more than 74 000 records). The two excluded studies that used a computer-assisted approach78 reported incidences of adverse events that were slightly lower (8.3% and 6.9%) than the median incidence of the studies included in the present review. This approach is much less time-consuming than the retrospective record review, but a drawback is that it cannot make judgements on causation or preventability.
Much attention is being devoted to finding solutions to improve patient safety. In 2005, the authors of some of the largest adverse event studies advocated the implementation of selected evidence-based practices that have a potential for large impact.50 When looking at the classification of events as demonstrated in this review, operation-related and drug-related events together comprise the majority. It would thus be logical to concentrate funds and efforts on evidence-based interventions aimed at reducing these events. In addition to the evidence-based interventions reviewed here, there are a number of other interventions that seem promising but warrant further research to prove their value. This includes interventions derived from the aviation industry, such as crew resource management and the use of checklists in the operating room.
In conclusion, adverse events during hospital admission are a serious problem, occurring in approximately 9% of all admitted patients and leading to a lethal outcome in 7% of cases. Since a large portion of the adverse events are operation- or drug-related, and almost half of these events are preventable, funds and efforts should be concentrated on interventions aimed at reducing these types of events.
REFERENCES
Footnotes
Funding: This research was funded by the Dutch Organization for Health Research and Development (ZonMw), The Hague, The Netherlands. Patient Safety Program, grant no. 8120.0007. ZonMw had no involvement with the authors’ work.
Competing interests: None.
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