Incident reports involving hospital administrative staff: analysis of data from the Japan Council for Quality Health care nationwide database

Abstract Background Task shifting and task sharing in health care are rapidly becoming more common as the shortage of physicians increases. However, research has not yet examined the changing roles of hospital administrative staff. This study clarified: (1) the adverse incidents caused by hospital a...

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Main Authors: Naomi Akiyama, Tomoya Akiyama, Kenshi Hayashida, Takeru Shiroiwa, Keisuke Koeda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-11-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05903-1
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spelling doaj-00d5a595477748d9ab60f9a016a61c5d2020-11-25T04:01:32ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632020-11-012011910.1186/s12913-020-05903-1Incident reports involving hospital administrative staff: analysis of data from the Japan Council for Quality Health care nationwide databaseNaomi Akiyama0Tomoya Akiyama1Kenshi Hayashida2Takeru Shiroiwa3Keisuke Koeda4Iwate Medical UniversityIwate Medical UniversityDepartment of Medical Informatics and Management, University Hospital, University of Occupational and Environmental HealthNational Institute of Public Health (NIPH) Center for Outcomes Research and Economic Evaluation for Health (C2H)Iwate Medical UniversityAbstract Background Task shifting and task sharing in health care are rapidly becoming more common as the shortage of physicians increases. However, research has not yet examined the changing roles of hospital administrative staff. This study clarified: (1) the adverse incidents caused by hospital administrative staff, and the direct and indirect impact of these incidents on patient care; and (2) the incidents that directly involved hospital administrative staff. Methods This study used case report data from the Japan Council for Quality Health care collected from April 1, 2010 to March 31, 2019, including a total of 30,823 reports. In April 2020, only the 88 self-reported incidents by hospital administrative staff were downloaded, excluding incidents reported by those in medical and co-medical occupations. Data from three reports implicating pharmacists were rejected and the quantitative and textual data from the remaining 85 case reports were analyzed in terms of whether they impacted patient care directly or indirectly. Results Thirty-nine reports (45.9%) involved direct impact on patient care, while 46 (54.1%) involved indirect impact on patient care. Most incidents that directly impacted patient care involved administrative staff writing prescriptions on behalf of a doctor (n = 24, 61.5%); followed by errors related to system administration, information, and documentation (n = 7, 17.9%). Most reported errors that indirectly affected patient care were related to system administration, information, and documentation used by administrative staff (n = 22, 47.8%), or to reception (n = 9, 19.6%). Almost all errors occurred during weekdays. Most frequent incidents involved outpatients (n = 23, 27.1%), or occurred next to examination/operation rooms (n = 12, 14.1%). Further, a total of 14 cases (16.5%) involved patient misidentification. Conclusions Incidents involving hospital administrative staff, the most common of which are medication errors from incorrect prescriptions, can lead to severe consequences for patients. Given that administrative staff now form a part of medical treatment teams, improvements in patient care may require further submission and review of incident reports involving administrative staff.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05903-1Hospital administrative staffIncidentsMedication errorTask shiftingTask sharingPatient safety
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Naomi Akiyama
Tomoya Akiyama
Kenshi Hayashida
Takeru Shiroiwa
Keisuke Koeda
spellingShingle Naomi Akiyama
Tomoya Akiyama
Kenshi Hayashida
Takeru Shiroiwa
Keisuke Koeda
Incident reports involving hospital administrative staff: analysis of data from the Japan Council for Quality Health care nationwide database
BMC Health Services Research
Hospital administrative staff
Incidents
Medication error
Task shifting
Task sharing
Patient safety
author_facet Naomi Akiyama
Tomoya Akiyama
Kenshi Hayashida
Takeru Shiroiwa
Keisuke Koeda
author_sort Naomi Akiyama
title Incident reports involving hospital administrative staff: analysis of data from the Japan Council for Quality Health care nationwide database
title_short Incident reports involving hospital administrative staff: analysis of data from the Japan Council for Quality Health care nationwide database
title_full Incident reports involving hospital administrative staff: analysis of data from the Japan Council for Quality Health care nationwide database
title_fullStr Incident reports involving hospital administrative staff: analysis of data from the Japan Council for Quality Health care nationwide database
title_full_unstemmed Incident reports involving hospital administrative staff: analysis of data from the Japan Council for Quality Health care nationwide database
title_sort incident reports involving hospital administrative staff: analysis of data from the japan council for quality health care nationwide database
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Abstract Background Task shifting and task sharing in health care are rapidly becoming more common as the shortage of physicians increases. However, research has not yet examined the changing roles of hospital administrative staff. This study clarified: (1) the adverse incidents caused by hospital administrative staff, and the direct and indirect impact of these incidents on patient care; and (2) the incidents that directly involved hospital administrative staff. Methods This study used case report data from the Japan Council for Quality Health care collected from April 1, 2010 to March 31, 2019, including a total of 30,823 reports. In April 2020, only the 88 self-reported incidents by hospital administrative staff were downloaded, excluding incidents reported by those in medical and co-medical occupations. Data from three reports implicating pharmacists were rejected and the quantitative and textual data from the remaining 85 case reports were analyzed in terms of whether they impacted patient care directly or indirectly. Results Thirty-nine reports (45.9%) involved direct impact on patient care, while 46 (54.1%) involved indirect impact on patient care. Most incidents that directly impacted patient care involved administrative staff writing prescriptions on behalf of a doctor (n = 24, 61.5%); followed by errors related to system administration, information, and documentation (n = 7, 17.9%). Most reported errors that indirectly affected patient care were related to system administration, information, and documentation used by administrative staff (n = 22, 47.8%), or to reception (n = 9, 19.6%). Almost all errors occurred during weekdays. Most frequent incidents involved outpatients (n = 23, 27.1%), or occurred next to examination/operation rooms (n = 12, 14.1%). Further, a total of 14 cases (16.5%) involved patient misidentification. Conclusions Incidents involving hospital administrative staff, the most common of which are medication errors from incorrect prescriptions, can lead to severe consequences for patients. Given that administrative staff now form a part of medical treatment teams, improvements in patient care may require further submission and review of incident reports involving administrative staff.
topic Hospital administrative staff
Incidents
Medication error
Task shifting
Task sharing
Patient safety
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05903-1
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