Computer visualisation of patient safety in primary care: a systems approach adapted from management science and engineering

Patient safety and medical errors in ambulatory primary care are receiving increasing attention from policy makers, accreditation bodies and researchers, as well as by practising family physicians and their patients.While a great deal of progress has been made in understanding errors in hospital set...

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Main Authors: Ranjit Singh, Ashok Singh, Chester Fox, John Taylor, Thomas Rosenthal, Gurdev Singh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT 2005-06-01
Series:Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
Subjects:
EMR
Online Access:http://hijournal.bcs.org/index.php/jhi/article/view/590
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spelling doaj-bf2dce41a97a4e6f9919466c6d7231da2020-11-24T22:35:54ZengBCS, The Chartered Institute for ITJournal of Innovation in Health Informatics2058-45552058-45632005-06-0113213514410.14236/jhi.v13i2.590532Computer visualisation of patient safety in primary care: a systems approach adapted from management science and engineeringRanjit SinghAshok SinghChester FoxJohn TaylorThomas RosenthalGurdev SinghPatient safety and medical errors in ambulatory primary care are receiving increasing attention from policy makers, accreditation bodies and researchers, as well as by practising family physicians and their patients.While a great deal of progress has been made in understanding errors in hospital settings, it is important to recognise that ambulatory settings pose a very large and different set of challenges and that the types of hazards that exist and the strategies required to reduce them are very different. What is needed is a logical theoretical model for understanding the causes of errors in primary care, the role of healthcare systems in contributing to errors, the propagation of errors through complex systems and, importantly, for understanding ambulatory primary care in the context of the larger healthcare system. The authors have developed such a model using a formal 'systems engineering' approach borrowed from the management sciences and engineering. This approach has not previously been formally described in the medical literature. This paper outlines the formal systems approach, presents our visual model of the system, and describes some experiences with and potential applications of the model for monitoring and improving safety. Applications include providing a framework to help focus research efforts, creation of new (visual) error reporting and taxonomy systems, furnishing a common and unambiguous vision for the healthcare team, and facilitating retrospective and prospective analyses of errors and adverse events. It is aimed at system redesign for safety improvement through a computer-based patient-centred safety enhancement and monitoring instrument (SEMI-P). This model can be integrated with electronic medical records (EMRs).http://hijournal.bcs.org/index.php/jhi/article/view/590EMRmedical errorsmodellingpatient safetyqualitysystemsvisualisation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ranjit Singh
Ashok Singh
Chester Fox
John Taylor
Thomas Rosenthal
Gurdev Singh
spellingShingle Ranjit Singh
Ashok Singh
Chester Fox
John Taylor
Thomas Rosenthal
Gurdev Singh
Computer visualisation of patient safety in primary care: a systems approach adapted from management science and engineering
Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
EMR
medical errors
modelling
patient safety
quality
systems
visualisation
author_facet Ranjit Singh
Ashok Singh
Chester Fox
John Taylor
Thomas Rosenthal
Gurdev Singh
author_sort Ranjit Singh
title Computer visualisation of patient safety in primary care: a systems approach adapted from management science and engineering
title_short Computer visualisation of patient safety in primary care: a systems approach adapted from management science and engineering
title_full Computer visualisation of patient safety in primary care: a systems approach adapted from management science and engineering
title_fullStr Computer visualisation of patient safety in primary care: a systems approach adapted from management science and engineering
title_full_unstemmed Computer visualisation of patient safety in primary care: a systems approach adapted from management science and engineering
title_sort computer visualisation of patient safety in primary care: a systems approach adapted from management science and engineering
publisher BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT
series Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
issn 2058-4555
2058-4563
publishDate 2005-06-01
description Patient safety and medical errors in ambulatory primary care are receiving increasing attention from policy makers, accreditation bodies and researchers, as well as by practising family physicians and their patients.While a great deal of progress has been made in understanding errors in hospital settings, it is important to recognise that ambulatory settings pose a very large and different set of challenges and that the types of hazards that exist and the strategies required to reduce them are very different. What is needed is a logical theoretical model for understanding the causes of errors in primary care, the role of healthcare systems in contributing to errors, the propagation of errors through complex systems and, importantly, for understanding ambulatory primary care in the context of the larger healthcare system. The authors have developed such a model using a formal 'systems engineering' approach borrowed from the management sciences and engineering. This approach has not previously been formally described in the medical literature. This paper outlines the formal systems approach, presents our visual model of the system, and describes some experiences with and potential applications of the model for monitoring and improving safety. Applications include providing a framework to help focus research efforts, creation of new (visual) error reporting and taxonomy systems, furnishing a common and unambiguous vision for the healthcare team, and facilitating retrospective and prospective analyses of errors and adverse events. It is aimed at system redesign for safety improvement through a computer-based patient-centred safety enhancement and monitoring instrument (SEMI-P). This model can be integrated with electronic medical records (EMRs).
topic EMR
medical errors
modelling
patient safety
quality
systems
visualisation
url http://hijournal.bcs.org/index.php/jhi/article/view/590
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