What Counts? An Ethnographic Study of Infection Data Reported to a Patient Safety Program

被引:87
作者
Dixon-Woods, Mary [1 ]
Leslie, Myles [3 ]
Bion, Julian [4 ]
Tarrant, Carolyn [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Leicester, Dept Hlth Sci, Sch Med, Social Sci Appl Healthcare Improvement Res Grp, Leicester LE1 7RH, Leics, England
[2] Univ Leicester, SAP PHIRE Grp, Leicester LE1 7RH, Leics, England
[3] Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, Baltimore, MD 21218 USA
[4] Univ Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, W Midlands, England
关键词
Patient safety; infection control; intensive care units; qualitative research; implementation science; BLOOD-STREAM INFECTIONS; INTENSIVE-CARE-UNIT; CATHETER-RELATED INFECTION; NATIONAL-HEALTH-SERVICE; PERFORMANCE-MEASUREMENT; SURVEILLANCE; ENGLISH; QUALITY; IMPROVEMENT; TARGETS;
D O I
10.1111/j.1468-0009.2012.00674.x
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Context: Performance measures are increasingly widely used in health care and have an important role in quality. However, field studies of what organizations are doing when they collect and report performance measures are rare. An opportunity for such a study was presented by a patient safety program requiring intensive care units (ICUs) in England to submit monthly data on central venous catheter bloodstream infections (CVC-BSIs). Methods: We conducted an ethnographic study involving similar to 855 hours of observational fieldwork and 93 interviews in 17 ICUs plus 29 telephone interviews. Findings: Variability was evident within and between ICUs in how they applied inclusion and exclusion criteria for the program, the data collection systems they established, practices in sending blood samples for analysis, microbiological support and laboratory techniques, and procedures for collecting and compiling data on possible infections. Those making decisions about what to report were not making decisions about the same things, nor were they making decisions in the same way. Rather than providing objective and clear criteria, the definitions for classifying infections used were seen as subjective, messy, and admitting the possibility of unfairness. Reported infection rates reflected localized interpretations rather than a standardized dataset across all ICUs. Variability arose not because of wily workers deliberately concealing, obscuring, or deceiving but because counting was as much a social practice as a technical practice. Conclusions: Rather than objective measures of incidence, differences in reported infection rates may reflect, at least to some extent, underlying social practices in data collection and reporting and variations in clinical practice. The variability we identified was largely artless rather than artful: currently dominant assumptions of gaming as responses to performance measures do not properly account for how categories and classifications operate in the pragmatic conduct of health care. These findings have important implications for assumptions about what can be achieved in infection reduction and quality improvement strategies.
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页码:548 / 591
页数:44
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