Summary
This comprehensive systematic review, produced by the General Medical Council) examined the prevalence, severity and key types of preventable patient harm.
Content
Key findings:
- The majority of studies typically classify patient harm as preventable if it occurs as a result of an identifiable modifiable cause and its future recurrence can be avoided by reasonable adaptation to a process or adherence to guidelines.
- At least 6% of patients experienced preventable harm across the healthcare service.
- 13% of the identified preventable harm causes prolonged or permanent disability or leads to death.
- The main types of patient safety incidents which contribute to preventable harm are medication incidents, diagnostic incidents and incidents occurring following the receipt of suboptimal clinical management/therapies.
- Despite the large number of studies included in this review, the quality and depth of data presented on preventable patient harm is very low. Preventability was reported as a secondary outcome across the vast majority of the studies – ie broadly, most of the studies were not focused on preventability.
- Research to identify the major preventable sources of severe patient harm as well as the stages, the systems and the practitioners involved in the occurrence of preventable harmful incidents is needed.
GMC: Preventable patient harm across healthcare services (November 2017)
https://www.gmc-uk.org/about/what-we-do-and-why/data-and-research/research-and-insight-archive/preventable-patient-harm-across-healthcare-services
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