Use of Physician Concerns and Patient Complaints as Quality Assurance Markers in Emergency Medicine

Introduction: The value of using patient- and physician-identified quality assurance (QA) issues in emergency medicine remains poorly characterized as a marker for emergency department (ED) QA. The objective of this study was to determine whether evaluation of patient and physician concerns is us...

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Main Authors: Kiersten L. Gurley, Richard E. Wolfe, Jonathan L. Burstein, Jonathan A. Edlow, Jason F. Hill, Shamai A. Grossman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eScholarship Publishing, University of California 2016-11-01
Series:Western Journal of Emergency Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://escholarship.org/uc/item/1053h4dm
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spelling doaj-c9c6bbaa6a5a445b8a0bc826cca8eec52020-11-24T22:14:32ZengeScholarship Publishing, University of CaliforniaWestern Journal of Emergency Medicine1936-900X1936-90182016-11-0117674975510.5811/westjem.2016.9.30578Use of Physician Concerns and Patient Complaints as Quality Assurance Markers in Emergency MedicineKiersten L. Gurley0Richard E. Wolfe1Jonathan L. Burstein2Jonathan A. Edlow3Jason F. Hill4Shamai A. Grossman5Harvard Medical School, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Boston, MassachusettsHarvard Medical School, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Boston, MassachusettsHarvard Medical School, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Boston, MassachusettsHarvard Medical School, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Boston, MassachusettsHarvard Medical School, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Boston, MassachusettsHarvard Medical School, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Boston, MassachusettsIntroduction: The value of using patient- and physician-identified quality assurance (QA) issues in emergency medicine remains poorly characterized as a marker for emergency department (ED) QA. The objective of this study was to determine whether evaluation of patient and physician concerns is useful for identifying medical errors resulting in either an adverse event or a near-miss event. Methods: We conducted a retrospective, observational cohort study of consecutive patients presenting between January 2008 and December 2014 to an urban, tertiary care academic medical center ED with an electronic error reporting system that allows physicians to identify QA issues for review. In our system, both patient and physician concerns are reviewed by physician evaluators not involved with the patients’ care to determine if a QA issue exists. If a potential QA issue is present, it is referred to a 20-member QA committee of emergency physicians and nurses who make a final determination as to whether or not an error or adverse event occurred. Results: We identified 570 concerns within a database of 383,419 ED presentations, of which 33 were patient-generated and 537 were physician-generated. Out of the 570 reports, a preventable adverse event was detected in 3.0% of cases (95% CI = [1.52-4.28]). Further analysis revealed that 9.1% (95% CI = [2-24]) of patient complaints correlated to preventable errors leading to an adverse event. In contrast, 2.6% (95% CI = [2-4]) of QA concerns reported by a physician alone were found to be due to preventable medical errors leading to an adverse event (p=0.069). Near-miss events (errors without adverse outcome) trended towards more accurate reporting by physicians, with medical error found in 12.1% of reported cases (95% CI = [10-15]) versus 9.1% of those reported by patients (95% CI = [2- 24] p=0.079). Adverse events in general that were not deemed to be due to preventable medical error were found in 12.1% of patient complaints (95% CI = [3-28]) and in 5.8% of physician QA concerns (95% CI = [4-8]). Conclusion: Screening and systemized evaluation of ED patient and physician complaints may be an underutilized QA tool. Patient complaints demonstrated a trend to identify medical errors that result in preventable adverse events, while physician QA concerns may be more likely to uncover a near miss.http://escholarship.org/uc/item/1053h4dmoriginal researchphysician concernspatient complaintsquality assuranceemergency medicine
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kiersten L. Gurley
Richard E. Wolfe
Jonathan L. Burstein
Jonathan A. Edlow
Jason F. Hill
Shamai A. Grossman
spellingShingle Kiersten L. Gurley
Richard E. Wolfe
Jonathan L. Burstein
Jonathan A. Edlow
Jason F. Hill
Shamai A. Grossman
Use of Physician Concerns and Patient Complaints as Quality Assurance Markers in Emergency Medicine
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine
original research
physician concerns
patient complaints
quality assurance
emergency medicine
author_facet Kiersten L. Gurley
Richard E. Wolfe
Jonathan L. Burstein
Jonathan A. Edlow
Jason F. Hill
Shamai A. Grossman
author_sort Kiersten L. Gurley
title Use of Physician Concerns and Patient Complaints as Quality Assurance Markers in Emergency Medicine
title_short Use of Physician Concerns and Patient Complaints as Quality Assurance Markers in Emergency Medicine
title_full Use of Physician Concerns and Patient Complaints as Quality Assurance Markers in Emergency Medicine
title_fullStr Use of Physician Concerns and Patient Complaints as Quality Assurance Markers in Emergency Medicine
title_full_unstemmed Use of Physician Concerns and Patient Complaints as Quality Assurance Markers in Emergency Medicine
title_sort use of physician concerns and patient complaints as quality assurance markers in emergency medicine
publisher eScholarship Publishing, University of California
series Western Journal of Emergency Medicine
issn 1936-900X
1936-9018
publishDate 2016-11-01
description Introduction: The value of using patient- and physician-identified quality assurance (QA) issues in emergency medicine remains poorly characterized as a marker for emergency department (ED) QA. The objective of this study was to determine whether evaluation of patient and physician concerns is useful for identifying medical errors resulting in either an adverse event or a near-miss event. Methods: We conducted a retrospective, observational cohort study of consecutive patients presenting between January 2008 and December 2014 to an urban, tertiary care academic medical center ED with an electronic error reporting system that allows physicians to identify QA issues for review. In our system, both patient and physician concerns are reviewed by physician evaluators not involved with the patients’ care to determine if a QA issue exists. If a potential QA issue is present, it is referred to a 20-member QA committee of emergency physicians and nurses who make a final determination as to whether or not an error or adverse event occurred. Results: We identified 570 concerns within a database of 383,419 ED presentations, of which 33 were patient-generated and 537 were physician-generated. Out of the 570 reports, a preventable adverse event was detected in 3.0% of cases (95% CI = [1.52-4.28]). Further analysis revealed that 9.1% (95% CI = [2-24]) of patient complaints correlated to preventable errors leading to an adverse event. In contrast, 2.6% (95% CI = [2-4]) of QA concerns reported by a physician alone were found to be due to preventable medical errors leading to an adverse event (p=0.069). Near-miss events (errors without adverse outcome) trended towards more accurate reporting by physicians, with medical error found in 12.1% of reported cases (95% CI = [10-15]) versus 9.1% of those reported by patients (95% CI = [2- 24] p=0.079). Adverse events in general that were not deemed to be due to preventable medical error were found in 12.1% of patient complaints (95% CI = [3-28]) and in 5.8% of physician QA concerns (95% CI = [4-8]). Conclusion: Screening and systemized evaluation of ED patient and physician complaints may be an underutilized QA tool. Patient complaints demonstrated a trend to identify medical errors that result in preventable adverse events, while physician QA concerns may be more likely to uncover a near miss.
topic original research
physician concerns
patient complaints
quality assurance
emergency medicine
url http://escholarship.org/uc/item/1053h4dm
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