New technology to enable personal monitoring and incident reporting can transform professional culture: the potential to favourably impact the future of health care

被引:17
作者
Bolsin, S [1 ]
Patrick, A [1 ]
Colson, M [1 ]
Creatie, B [1 ]
Freestone, L [1 ]
机构
[1] Geelong Hosp, Div Perioperat Med Anaesthesia & Pain Med, Geelong, Vic 3220, Australia
关键词
electronic support; incident reporting; medical ethics; performance monitoring;
D O I
10.1111/j.1365-2753.2005.00567.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
There have been recent exposures of poor health care performance in many countries with western health care systems. The poor performance has either related to poor or criminal practices routinely going undetected or to organizational indifference or hostility to staff raising concerns about perceived poor standards of care. The demonstration that routine performance data monitoring would have detected and prevented many of the deaths attributed to poor surgical standards in the Bristol Royal Infirmary paediatric cardiac surgery scandal and criminal behaviour in the Harold Shipman scandal has highlighted the need for routine data collection to demonstrate to both health care administrators and patients that minimum standards of clinical practice are being achieved. The recent proposal that surgical report cards represent an important minimum ethical standard for health care consent will force the medical profession to engage in the debate surrounding routine data collection for performance monitoring and other purposes. This article considers the cultural background to data collection in the medical profession and the cost implications of failing to improve data collection in the areas of performance monitoring and incident reporting. A potential solution developed by the Geelong hospital group and in use in Australia is proposed as a novel, technologically appropriate and working example of practical data collection. This model is endorsed by the professional specialties and supported by modern regulatory theory. The individual, local and system wide benefits of such personal professional data collection are outlined and the necessary prerequisites are detailed.
引用
收藏
页码:499 / 506
页数:8
相关论文
共 70 条
[61]   Reasons for not reporting adverse incidents: an empirical study [J].
Vincent, C ;
Stanhope, N ;
Crowley-Murphy, M .
JOURNAL OF EVALUATION IN CLINICAL PRACTICE, 1999, 5 (01) :13-21
[62]   Adverse events in British hospitals: preliminary retrospective record review [J].
Vincent, C ;
Neale, G ;
Woloshynowych, M .
BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2001, 322 (7285) :517-519
[63]   When things go wrong: How health care organizations deal with major failures [J].
Walshe, K ;
Shortell, SM .
HEALTH AFFAIRS, 2004, 23 (03) :103-111
[64]   Risk of cancer from mobile phones is unclear [J].
White, C .
BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2004, 328 (7432) :124-124
[65]   Risk management: how doctors, hospitals and MDOs can limit the costs of malpractice litigation [J].
Wilson, LL ;
Fulton, M .
MEDICAL JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIA, 2000, 172 (02) :77-80
[66]   An analysis of the causes of adverse events from the Quality in Australian Health Care Study [J].
Wilson, RM ;
Harrison, BT ;
Gibberd, RW ;
Hamilton, JD .
MEDICAL JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIA, 1999, 170 (09) :411-415
[67]   The Quality in Australian health care study [J].
Wilson, RM ;
Runciman, WB ;
Gibberd, RW ;
Harrison, BT ;
Newby, L ;
Hamilton, JD .
MEDICAL JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIA, 1995, 163 (09) :458-471
[68]   Limited adverse occurrence screening: Using medical record review to reduce hospital adverse patient events [J].
Wolff, AM .
MEDICAL JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIA, 1996, 164 (08) :458-461
[69]   Detecting and reducing hospital adverse events: outcomes of the Wimmera clinical risk management program [J].
Wolff, AM ;
Bourke, J ;
Campbell, IA ;
Leembruggen, DW .
MEDICAL JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIA, 2001, 174 (12) :621-625
[70]  
1949, WORLD MED ASS B, V1, P109