Title: EMERGENCY
1EMERGENCY MEDICINE EVENTS REGISTER A
Clinical Analysis of Procedural Errors Follow us
at _at_EmergMedER Visit us at
emer.org.au
Kim Hansen 1,2 Carmel Crock 3 Anita Deakin 4 Tim
Schultz 4 William Runciman 4 Andrew Gosbell5
1. The Prince Charles Hospital, 2. The
University of Queensland, 3. The Eye and Ear
Hospital of Victoria, 4. Australian Patient
Safety Foundation, 5. ACEM
2Introduction
- To capture and analyse adverse events, near
misses and good saves that occur in Emergency
Departments, we developed an online, anonymous
incident reporting register called Emergency
Medicine Events Register (EMER) at emer.org.au. - Context This Patient Safety project is a
collaboration between the Australasian College
for Emergency Medicine (ACEM) and the Australian
Patient Safety Foundation (APSF). It is aimed
specifically at doctors of all levels who work in
Emergency Departments. - Problem Errors in medicine occur frequently and
cause significant morbidity and mortality. Due to
its chaotic nature, undifferentiated patients and
variable levels of staff experience, the
likelihood of patient harm in Emergency
Departments is increased. - Assessment of problem and analysis of its causes
Doctors rarely report using existing incident
reporting systems. We encourage doctors to make
relevant and informative entries that their
colleagues could learn from.
Click HERE to go to emer.org.au
Follow us at _at_EmergMedER Visit us at
emer.org.au
3Methods
- We created emer.org.au which allows reporting of
adverse events where information is confidential,
protected and anonymous. - Intervention At emer.org.au, the clinician
remains anonymous and no patient or hospital
details are recorded other than basic
demographics. The website has a user-friendly
design with only 4 pages of questions, most of
which are drop-down boxes and non-compulsory.
There is no registration, login or password
required and the website is free to access. -
- Study design The EMER website, emer.org.au, was
designed with expert input from Emergency
Consultants on the ACEM Quality Sub-Committee and
APSF staff. EMER was launched in November 2012
and the website is open to for use by all
Emergency Clinicians. - Analysis We analysed the data for the
demographics of patients involved in an event,
triage score, the time taken to complete and
entry and the delegation of the reporting
clinician. Entries into EMER were analysed by a
panel of expert clinicians to determine the
clinical category of the incidents.
Identify
Report
Improve
Learn more about EMER
Anonymous, Confidential and Protected
4Results
The first 246 entries into EMER via emer.org.au
from November 2012 to March 2016 were analysed.
Analysis results Each incident was categorised
into up to 4 categories, creating 473 categories
in total. The most common triage score was 3.
It took under 5 minutes to enter an incident on
average.
Categories of EMER Incidents (Total473)
- The most frequent incident categories are
- Diagnostic (n 95)
- Investigation (n 62)
- Procedure (n 53)
- There are multiple incidents of harm in the
database, including eight deaths, and five
incidents with irreversible harm to the patient.
One staff member was electrocuted during a
defibrillation. - The most common procedural incident involved
intubation. The other common procedural errors
were intravenous access, ophthalmological
procedures and procedural sedation.
Follow us at _at_EmergMedER Visit us at
emer.org.au
5Procedural Errors
Case Study
- There have been 53 reports in the EMER database
involving procedures. Within the procedural
incidents, other common categories of error
include Failure to recognise deterioration,
Equipment, Medication, Transport and Diagnostic
errors. There were several reports of patient
harm, including - 8 deaths
- 1 cardiac arrest and 1 respiratory arrest with
successful resuscitation - 2 oesophageal intubations
- 2 cricothyroidotomies and 1 needle
cricothyroidotomy - The most common role of the clinician involved in
the incident was ED consultant, however over 95
of reporters were ED Consultants.
- What happened?
- Patient deteriorated in ED acute area, with
increasing SOB. Moved to resus. ED Consultant
attempted to intubate with RSI but unsuccessful.
Anaesthetist called, requested glidescope,
anti-fog and glycopyrollate, all of which were
unavailable in ED. Video laryngoscope used but
battery ran out prior to first attempt.
Anaesthetist unable to intubate patient in ED
despite multiple attempts. Patient able to be
ventilated with BVM. - How could the incident have been prevented?
- Additional preparation time for anaesthetist and
surgeon with earlier warning. Standardisation of
equipment and processes in hospital.
Inter-departmental education sessions. - Action Taken
- Patient was transported to OT while being
ventilated with BVM (satsgt90). He was gassed
down by anaesthetist with surgeons scrubbed and
neck prepped. Epiglottitis seen on glidescope.
6Conclusion
- The future for EMER Further awareness of
emer.org.au to increase the number and quality of
entries into EMER is the key to its utility to
the profession. The expansion of the database
will allow patterns of harm to emerge and allow
EMER to educate its fellows and members on
changes necessary to enhance patient safety.
There is regular reporting of the EMER results
back to the critical care community via Twitter,
Patient Safety Alerts and other mediums. From
March 2016, patients are able to report into EMER
as well.
Click HERE to start video
There are lessons to be learnt from medical
errors. EMER provides the opportunity to
collect incidents which can be used to improve
patient safety.
Follow us at _at_EmergMedER Visit us at
emer.org.au