Claire Cox 190 Posted 18 July, 2019 Incidents per 1000 bed days – what does this actually mean? How is this sum used to quantify incidents reported in an outpatient setting? 0 reactions so far Neal Jones 2 Posted 16 August, 2019 I don't think that Occupied bed days can apply to an outpatient setting. what may add value is to agree a standardised probability measure to define the incidence of harm. This could be as crude as episodes of harm/per 1,000 appointments/interactions, however that wouldn't be of sufficient quality to meaningfully differentiate between the associated risks of different procedural types etc A further breakdown against actual activity/procedural type would help to identify areas of high risk and support targeted interventions to ensure effective mitigation. Neal. 0 reactions so far Claire Cox 190 Posted 16 August, 2019 Thanks Neal, This was a question the people from twitter were asking. I had no clue! (neither did any one else) 0 reactions so far Create an account or sign in to comment You need to be a member in order to leave a comment Create an account Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy! Register a new account Sign in Already have an account? Sign in here. Sign In Now Share https://www.pslhub.org/forums/topic/11-bed-dayswhat-does-this-mean-for-the-outpatient-setting/ Followers 1 Go to topic listing Related hub content Why has NHS England been abolished and what does it mean for patients? (The Guardian, 13 March 2025) Latest comment by Patient Safety Learning Doctors and physician associates: As a medical student, I’m trying to figure out who does what (5 April 2025) Latest comment by Patient Safety Learning The King's Fund: What does the Autumn Budget 2024 mean for health and care? (31 October 2024) Latest comment by Patient Safety Learning
Neal Jones 2 Posted 16 August, 2019 I don't think that Occupied bed days can apply to an outpatient setting. what may add value is to agree a standardised probability measure to define the incidence of harm. This could be as crude as episodes of harm/per 1,000 appointments/interactions, however that wouldn't be of sufficient quality to meaningfully differentiate between the associated risks of different procedural types etc A further breakdown against actual activity/procedural type would help to identify areas of high risk and support targeted interventions to ensure effective mitigation. Neal. 0 reactions so far Claire Cox 190 Posted 16 August, 2019 Thanks Neal, This was a question the people from twitter were asking. I had no clue! (neither did any one else) 0 reactions so far Create an account or sign in to comment You need to be a member in order to leave a comment Create an account Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy! Register a new account Sign in Already have an account? Sign in here. Sign In Now Share https://www.pslhub.org/forums/topic/11-bed-dayswhat-does-this-mean-for-the-outpatient-setting/ Followers 1 Go to topic listing
Claire Cox 190 Posted 16 August, 2019 Thanks Neal, This was a question the people from twitter were asking. I had no clue! (neither did any one else) 0 reactions so far Create an account or sign in to comment You need to be a member in order to leave a comment Create an account Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy! Register a new account Sign in Already have an account? Sign in here. Sign In Now Share https://www.pslhub.org/forums/topic/11-bed-dayswhat-does-this-mean-for-the-outpatient-setting/ Followers 1
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