A content validated questionnaire for assessment of self reported venous blood sampling practices

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Venous blood sampling is a common procedure in health care. It is strictly regulated by national and international guidelines. Deviations from guidelines due to human mistakes can cause patient harm. Validated questionnaires for heal...

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Main Authors: Bölenius Karin, Brulin Christine, Grankvist Kjell, Lindkvist Marie, Söderberg Johan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2012-01-01
Series:BMC Research Notes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1756-0500/5/39
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spelling doaj-20b14e2290ff4b3497d3303881f0c1192020-11-25T00:47:16ZengBMCBMC Research Notes1756-05002012-01-01513910.1186/1756-0500-5-39A content validated questionnaire for assessment of self reported venous blood sampling practicesBölenius KarinBrulin ChristineGrankvist KjellLindkvist MarieSöderberg Johan<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Venous blood sampling is a common procedure in health care. It is strictly regulated by national and international guidelines. Deviations from guidelines due to human mistakes can cause patient harm. Validated questionnaires for health care personnel can be used to assess preventable "near misses"--i.e. potential errors and nonconformities during venous blood sampling practices that could transform into adverse events. However, no validated questionnaire that assesses nonconformities in venous blood sampling has previously been presented. The aim was to test a recently developed questionnaire in self reported venous blood sampling practices for validity and reliability.</p> <p>Findings</p> <p>We developed a questionnaire to assess deviations from best practices during venous blood sampling. The questionnaire contained questions about patient identification, test request management, test tube labeling, test tube handling, information search procedures and frequencies of error reporting. For content validity, the questionnaire was confirmed by experts on questionnaires and venous blood sampling. For reliability, test-retest statistics were used on the questionnaire answered twice. The final venous blood sampling questionnaire included 19 questions out of which 9 had in total 34 underlying items. It was found to have content validity. The test-retest analysis demonstrated that the items were generally stable. In total, 82% of the items fulfilled the reliability acceptance criteria.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The questionnaire could be used for assessment of "near miss" practices that could jeopardize patient safety and gives several benefits instead of assessing rare adverse events only. The higher frequencies of "near miss" practices allows for quantitative analysis of the effect of corrective interventions and to benchmark preanalytical quality not only at the laboratory/hospital level but also at the health care unit/hospital ward.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1756-0500/5/39Error risk assessmentPatient safetyPreanalytical errorsQuestionnairesReliability and validityRiskVenous blood sampling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bölenius Karin
Brulin Christine
Grankvist Kjell
Lindkvist Marie
Söderberg Johan
spellingShingle Bölenius Karin
Brulin Christine
Grankvist Kjell
Lindkvist Marie
Söderberg Johan
A content validated questionnaire for assessment of self reported venous blood sampling practices
BMC Research Notes
Error risk assessment
Patient safety
Preanalytical errors
Questionnaires
Reliability and validity
Risk
Venous blood sampling
author_facet Bölenius Karin
Brulin Christine
Grankvist Kjell
Lindkvist Marie
Söderberg Johan
author_sort Bölenius Karin
title A content validated questionnaire for assessment of self reported venous blood sampling practices
title_short A content validated questionnaire for assessment of self reported venous blood sampling practices
title_full A content validated questionnaire for assessment of self reported venous blood sampling practices
title_fullStr A content validated questionnaire for assessment of self reported venous blood sampling practices
title_full_unstemmed A content validated questionnaire for assessment of self reported venous blood sampling practices
title_sort content validated questionnaire for assessment of self reported venous blood sampling practices
publisher BMC
series BMC Research Notes
issn 1756-0500
publishDate 2012-01-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Venous blood sampling is a common procedure in health care. It is strictly regulated by national and international guidelines. Deviations from guidelines due to human mistakes can cause patient harm. Validated questionnaires for health care personnel can be used to assess preventable "near misses"--i.e. potential errors and nonconformities during venous blood sampling practices that could transform into adverse events. However, no validated questionnaire that assesses nonconformities in venous blood sampling has previously been presented. The aim was to test a recently developed questionnaire in self reported venous blood sampling practices for validity and reliability.</p> <p>Findings</p> <p>We developed a questionnaire to assess deviations from best practices during venous blood sampling. The questionnaire contained questions about patient identification, test request management, test tube labeling, test tube handling, information search procedures and frequencies of error reporting. For content validity, the questionnaire was confirmed by experts on questionnaires and venous blood sampling. For reliability, test-retest statistics were used on the questionnaire answered twice. The final venous blood sampling questionnaire included 19 questions out of which 9 had in total 34 underlying items. It was found to have content validity. The test-retest analysis demonstrated that the items were generally stable. In total, 82% of the items fulfilled the reliability acceptance criteria.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The questionnaire could be used for assessment of "near miss" practices that could jeopardize patient safety and gives several benefits instead of assessing rare adverse events only. The higher frequencies of "near miss" practices allows for quantitative analysis of the effect of corrective interventions and to benchmark preanalytical quality not only at the laboratory/hospital level but also at the health care unit/hospital ward.</p>
topic Error risk assessment
Patient safety
Preanalytical errors
Questionnaires
Reliability and validity
Risk
Venous blood sampling
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1756-0500/5/39
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