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SIGNIFICANT EVENT AUDIT

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Title: SIGNIFICANT EVENT AUDIT


1
SIGNIFICANTEVENT AUDIT
  • Jonathan Bayly
  • Chair Gloucestershire PCCAG

2
What is Significant Event Audit?
  • Defined as occurring when
  • ..individual episodes in which there has been a
    significant occurrence (either beneficial or
    deleterious) are analysed in a systematic and
    detailed way to ascertain what can be learnt
    about the overall quality of care and to indicate
    changes that might lead to future improvements.
    (after Pringle 1995)

3
WHAT IS SIGNIFICANTEVENT AUDIT?
  • Something happens
  • Can we learn anything from this?
  • How do we learn from this?
  • What are the consequences?

4
WHY DO SIGNIFICANT EVENT AUDIT?
  • Clinical governance
  • Organisations with a memory
  • Risk management
  • Complaints procedures
  • Personal/practice development plans
  • Appraisal
  • Re-validation requirement?

5
Historical Perspective
  • Secondary Care
  • Cases Post-mortem to CEPOD
  • Cohort Audit - recent
  • Primary Care
  • Cohorts Nightingale to Donabedian
  • Cases Balint, random case analysis
  • and Significant Event Auditing

6
The Philosophy
  • Change is an emotional process
  • Harnessing an existing feature of the practice
  • Structured, rigorous
  • Not blame allocating but quality oriented

7
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8
Examples of Significant Events
  • Clinical
  • New cancers
  • Pregnancies with contraception
  • Sudden deaths
  • Chronic diseases (e.g. epilepsy, MS)
  • Traumas, suicides

9
Examples of Significant Events
  • Clinical
  • Myocardial infarctions
  • Strokes
  • Acute infections, e.g. meningitis
  • Drug reactions
  • Terminal care

10
Examples of Significant Events
  • Administrative
  • Patient complaints
  • Aggressive patients
  • Dispensing/prescription errors
  • Home visits not done
  • Breaches of confidentiality

11
Examples of Significant Events
  • Administrative
  • Rota problems
  • Staff upsets
  • Communication failures (e.g. referrals)
  • Appointment difficulties
  • Medico-legal issues

12
How to get the ball rolling
  • Initial meeting to decide on
  • Method of reporting - log book or report form
  • Chair facilitator
  • Constituency
  • Ground rules
  • Structure of significant event meetings

13
Things to include in a report
  • A simple statement is sufficient
  • Or a more detailed log

14
A structured report
  • Identity of patient/staff member if appropriate
  • Date/time if appropriate
  • Actual or potential event?
  • Brief summary of event
  • Health and safety issue?
  • Action taken already
  • Were patient/carers informed?
  • Suggestions to prevent recurrence
  • Reporters identity (optional)

15
Process of the Meeting
  • Check action on decisions from previous meeting
  • Invitation to each person or group to present a
    case
  • General discussion
  • Decisions (if any)

16
Outcomes
  • Congratulations and celebration
  • Conventional audit or clarification
  • Immediate action
  • Guidelines
  • Education
  • Research
  • No action

17
What makes it work?
  • Overcome shyness, nervousness initially
  • Reassure staff not involved
  • Confidentiality of facilitator
  • Role of Practice Manager
  • Structure of meeting

18
What makes it work?
  • Humour
  • Sensitive issues handled well
  • Fresh items
  • Maintaining impetus/time
  • Trust and communication
  • Firm facilitation

19
Main points to be considered
  • Enjoyable
  • Challenging
  • Complements other quality activity
  • Leads to real challenge
  • Involves more members of the team
  • More time effective than conventional audit?

20
Strengths
  • Outcomes focused
  • High emotional appeal
  • Deals with real problems
  • Breadth of issues
  • Less preparation
  • Less reliant on records
  • Immediate feedback
  • Team building
  • Raises interface and team issues

21
Weaknesses
  • May be superficial
  • May be threatening
  • Emotionally demanding
  • May expose issues that are difficult to resolve
  • Requires a coherent team

22
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24
  • It is a mark of the educated man and a proof of
    his culture that in all matters he looks for only
    as much detail as the nature of the problem
    permits or its solution requires.
  • Aristotle

25
Organisations with a memory
  • Unified mechanism for reporting and analysis
  • Near miss concept
  • A more open culture to discuss service failures
  • Mechanism for ensuring change happens as a result
    of lessons learned
  • Systems approach in preventing, analysing and
    learning from errors

26
Organisations with a memory
  • Mandatory reporting scheme for adverse health
    care events and specified near misses
  • Encourage a reporting and questioning culture
  • Single overall system for analysis and
    disseminating lessons
  • Make better use of existing sources of
    information on AEs
  • Improve the quality and relevance of AE inquiries
  • Undertake a programme of basic research
  • Use new NHS information systems to help staff
    access learning from AE
  • Ensure lessons are implemented quickly and
    consistently
  • Focus on frequent offenders

27
Why NPSA was born
  • A number of widely publicised high profile cases
  • 850,000 adverse incidents per year 1/3 leading
    to disability or death1
  • 50 avoidable according to US studies
  • 2 billion/year in additional in-patient stays
  • 400 million in compensation
  • 1 Vincent C, BMA conference, March 2000

28
National Patient Safety Agency
Prof Rory Shaw, Chair NPSA
29
NPSA definition
  • Any event or circumstance that could have lead
    to un-intended or unexpected harm, loss or damage

30
Possible reportable incidents
  • Unexpected death while under direct care
  • Death on premises
  • Suicide/homicide by patient under treatment for
    mental disorder
  • Potentially lethal or serious health care
    associated infection
  • Proven rape
  • Wrong patient/body part
  • Retained devices
  • Haemolytic transfusion reaction
  • Child abduction or incorrect discharge
  • Incorrect radiation exposure

31
Where to go for further help!
32
Resources
  • http//www.npsa.org.uk/publications
  • An Organisation with a Memory Report from an
    expert group on learning from adverse events in
    the NHS DOH June 2000
  • MDU practice based seminars on Risk Management,
    SEA and AIR
  • Adverse Incident Reporting available from MDU
    this summer

33
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34
Risk Management
35
What is risk?
  • Risk is the probability that a situation will
    produce harm under specific conditions - the
    probability that something you do not want to
    happen will happen.
  • It is measured in terms of likelihood and
    consequences.

36
Risk Management
  • Focus on the system rather than the individual
    incident
  • It is anticipatory not reactive in emphasis
  • Significant event audit therefore supports risk
    management by monitoring it

37
Relationship to critical event audit
38
Benefits
  • better outcomes and patient satisfaction
    (improved quality of service)
  • ability to learn from mistakes
  • reduced costs of litigation and compensation
  • better public image
  • better allocation of resources
  • more informed decision-making
  • greater compliance with legislation
  • greater transparency and accessibility to
    external review

39
Examples
40
Clinical
  • Failure to adequately examine a patient
  • Failure to fully document or send samples to the
    lab
  • Prescribing errors
  • Dispensing errors
  • Inadequate records
  • Inexperienced clinical staff
  • Inadequate/unavailable medical records
  • Failure to provide informed consent

41
Non-clinical
  • Maintenance of equipment
  • Maintenance of buildings
  • Waste management
  • Infection control
  • Fire safety
  • Employers liability
  • Message handling
  • Staff turn-over
  • Security of information

42
Key requirements
  • Leadership and commitment of an identified
    individual
  • Policy and strategy
  • Planning and organisation
  • Resourcing
  • Process - incident reporting and investigation or
    complaints handling
  • Measurement evaluation and improvement
  • Audit

43
The risk management mentality
  • Will look for near misses
  • Will look for danger ahead
  • Will put patient safety first
  • Will reflect on clinical and non-clinical care
  • Will communicate
  • Will accept change
  • Will be responsive
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