A World Health Organization field trial assessing a proposed ICD-11 framework for classifying patient safety events.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_E3610C9D94A6
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
A World Health Organization field trial assessing a proposed ICD-11 framework for classifying patient safety events.
Journal
International journal for quality in health care
Author(s)
Forster A.J., Bernard B., Drösler S.E., Gurevich Y., Harrison J., Januel J.M., Romano P.S., Southern D.A., Sundararajan V., Quan H., Vanderloo S.E., Pincus H.A., Ghali W.A.
ISSN
1464-3677 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1353-4505
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/08/2017
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
29
Number
4
Pages
548-556
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
To assess the utility of the proposed World Health Organization (WHO)'s International Classification of Disease (ICD) framework for classifying patient safety events.
Independent classification of 45 clinical vignettes using a web-based platform.
The WHO's multi-disciplinary Quality and Safety Topic Advisory Group.
The framework consists of three concepts: harm, cause and mode. We defined a concept as 'classifiable' if more than half of the raters could assign an ICD-11 code for the case. We evaluated reasons why cases were nonclassifiable using a qualitative approach.
Harm was classifiable in 31 of 45 cases (69%). Of these, only 20 could be classified according to cause and mode. Classifiable cases were those in which a clear cause and effect relationship existed (e.g. medication administration error). Nonclassifiable cases were those without clear causal attribution (e.g. pressure ulcer). Of the 14 cases in which harm was not evident (31%), only 5 could be classified according to cause and mode and represented potential adverse events. Overall, nine cases (20%) were nonclassifiable using the three-part patient safety framework and contained significant ambiguity in the relationship between healthcare outcome and putative cause.
The proposed framework enabled classification of the majority of patient safety events. Cases in which potentially harmful events did not cause harm were not classifiable; additional code categories within the ICD-11 are one proposal to address this concern. Cases with ambiguity in cause and effect relationship between healthcare processes and outcomes remain difficult to classify.
Keywords
Humans, International Classification of Diseases, Medical Errors/classification, Patient Safety/standards, Quality Indicators, Health Care, World Health Organization, patient safety, quality indicators
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
09/10/2017 10:24
Last modification date
20/08/2019 17:07
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