Faizan Posted 18 July, 2019 Faizan 0 Posted 18 July, 2019 Dear All Please excuse my ignorance, especially if I am failing to see or understand something that is so glaringly obvious! However, I wondered if any of you, my esteemed colleagues, would be able to assist me with a conundrum that I currently face: Number of incidents occurring per 1,000 bed days My questions: What does this actually mean, and how is this useful exactly? How do you know if the sum of a bed days calculation is good or bad? How can this sum be used to quantify/understand incidents that occur within an outpatient setting (or a setting that does not involve bed days)? For example, if we say that an organisation has 5,910 incidents and a bed days figure of 171,971, we would then need to calculate 5,910 / 171,971 x 1000 = 34.36. As the NRLS uses the 'metric', incidents by 1000 bed days, to write a report which includes this sum for your organisation, and that of your "cluster" (other organisations that are 'supposedly' similar to yours), what does this sum actually signify and how can this be used to try and compare yourself to other service providers? Regards Faizan 0 reactions so far PatientSafetyLearning Team Posted 4 November, 2019 PatientSafetyLearning Team 109 Posted 4 November, 2019 Hi @Faizan I thought you may be interested in a similar post from Claire Cox... @Claire Cox are you able to comment on any of Faizan's specific points? 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 Followers 0 Go to topic listing
PatientSafetyLearning Team Posted 4 November, 2019 PatientSafetyLearning Team 109 Posted 4 November, 2019 Hi @Faizan I thought you may be interested in a similar post from Claire Cox... @Claire Cox are you able to comment on any of Faizan's specific points? 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 Followers 0