National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report
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Topics
- Adverse Drug Events (ADE) (2)
- (-) Adverse Events (10)
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- Chronic Conditions (1)
- Communication (1)
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- Medication: Safety (1)
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- Patient-Centered Outcomes Research (2)
- Patient Safety (5)
- Pregnancy (1)
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- Quality of Care (2)
- Surgery (2)
- Teams (1)
- Transitions of Care (2)
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AHRQ Research Studies
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Research Studies is a compilation of published research articles funded by AHRQ or authored by AHRQ researchers.
Results
1 to 10 of 10 Research Studies DisplayedGiardina TD, Hunte H, Hill MA
Defining diagnostic error: a scoping review to assess the impact of the National Academies' report improving diagnosis in Health Care.
This study looked at peer-reviewed published literature to explore how researchers operationalize the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine’s (NASEM) definition of diagnostic error that was defined in their 2015 publication “Improving Diagnosis in Health Care”. Published literature was identified from October 2015 to February 2021. The authors also conducted subject matter expert interviews. Of the 34 studies identified, 16 were analyzed and abstracted to determine how diagnostic error was operationalized and measured. Studies were grouped by four themes: epidemiology, patient focus, measurement/surveillance, and clinician focus. Nine studies identified used the NASM definition. Five of those studies also operationalized with existing definitions proposed before the NASEM report, four operationalized the components of the NASEM definition, and three studies operationalized error using existing definitions only. Subject matter experts concluded that the NASEM definition functions as a foundation for researchers to conceptualize diagnostic error.
AHRQ-funded; 233201500022I; HS027280; HS025474; HS027363.
Citation: Giardina TD, Hunte H, Hill MA .
Defining diagnostic error: a scoping review to assess the impact of the National Academies' report improving diagnosis in Health Care.
J Patient Saf 2022 Dec 1;18(8):770-78. doi: 10.1097/pts.0000000000000999..
Keywords: Diagnostic Safety and Quality, Quality of Care, Medical Errors, Adverse Events, Healthcare Delivery
Kohn R, Harhay MO, Bayes B
Influence of bedspacing on outcomes of hospitalised medicine service patients: a retrospective cohort study.
The objective of this cohort study was to assess the association of bedspacing with patient-centered outcomes among United States patients admitted to general medicine services. The study compared internal medicine, family medicine and geriatric service patients who were bedspaced versus cohorted for the entirety of their hospital stay within three large, urban hospitals. Findings showed that bedspacing was associated with adverse patient-centered outcomes. Recommendations for future work included a need to confirm these findings, to understand mechanisms contributing to adverse outcomes, and to identify factors that mitigate these adverse effects in order to provide high-value, patient-centered care to hospitalized patients.
AHRQ-funded; HS026372.
Citation: Kohn R, Harhay MO, Bayes B .
Influence of bedspacing on outcomes of hospitalised medicine service patients: a retrospective cohort study.
BMJ Qual Saf 2021 Feb;30(2):116-22. doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2019-010675..
Keywords: Patient-Centered Outcomes Research, Outcomes, Inpatient Care, Hospitals, Healthcare Delivery, Care Management, Adverse Events
Oslock WM, Ricci KB, Ingraham AM
Role of interprofessional teams in emergency general surgery patient outcomes.
This paper discusses the results of a 2015 survey of acute care hospitals, which asked whether residents and advanced practice providers participate in emergency general surgery care. The data was then linked to patient data from 17 State Inpatient Databases using American Hospital Association identifiers to determine if that was associated with better management of patients, mortality, or complications. Eighty-three hospitals and 49,271 unique emergency general surgery admissions were included in the dataset. Hospitals with residents had reduced odds of systemic complications compared with hospitals without them or other clinical support. Hospitals with only residents had the lowest odds of operative complication.
AHRQ-funded; HS022694.
Citation: Oslock WM, Ricci KB, Ingraham AM .
Role of interprofessional teams in emergency general surgery patient outcomes.
Surgery 2020 Aug;168(2):347-53. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2020.04.046..
Keywords: Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP), Teams, Surgery, Adverse Events, Hospitals, Healthcare Delivery
Singh H, Graber ML, Hofer TP
Measures to improve diagnostic safety in clinical practice.
In this paper, the investigators discuss how the need to develop measures to improve diagnostic performance could move forward at a time when the scientific foundation needed to inform measurement is still evolving. They highlight challenges and opportunities for developing potential measures of "diagnostic safety" related to clinical diagnostic errors and associated preventable diagnostic harm. In doing so, they propose a starter set of measurement concepts for initial consideration that seem reasonably related to diagnostic safety and call for these to be studied and further refined.
AHRQ-funded; HS022087.
Citation: Singh H, Graber ML, Hofer TP .
Measures to improve diagnostic safety in clinical practice.
J Patient Saf 2019 Dec;15(4):311-16. doi: 10.1097/pts.0000000000000338.
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Keywords: Patient Safety, Diagnostic Safety and Quality, Healthcare Delivery, Quality Improvement, Quality of Care, Medical Errors, Adverse Events
Mixon AS, Kripalani S, Stein J
An on-treatment analysis of the MARQUIS study: interventions to improve inpatient medication reconciliation.
This paper examined evidence-based interventions implemented in five US hospitals to improve inpatient medication reconciliation. The sites implemented one to seven interventions in 791 patients during a 25-month implementation period. Three interventions were associated with significant decreases in potentially harmful reconciliation rates while two interventions were associated with significant increases. The positive interventions included: defining clinical roles and responsibilities, training, and hiring staff to perform discharge medication reconciliation. The negative interventions were training staff to take medication histories and implementing a new electronic health record (EHR) system.
AHRQ-funded; HS019598.
Citation: Mixon AS, Kripalani S, Stein J .
An on-treatment analysis of the MARQUIS study: interventions to improve inpatient medication reconciliation.
J Hosp Med 2019 Oct;14(10):614-17. doi: 10.12788/jhm.3308..
Keywords: Medication, Evidence-Based Practice, Adverse Drug Events (ADE), Adverse Events, Medical Errors, Patient Safety, Hospitals, Healthcare Delivery, Inpatient Care
Hussain FS, Sosa T, Ambroggio L
Emergency transfers: an important predictor of adverse outcomes in hospitalized children.
This case-control study aimed to determine the predictive validity of an emergency transfer (ET) for outcomes in a free-standing children's hospital. Controls were matched in terms of age, hospital unit, and time of year. Patients who experienced an ET had a significantly higher likelihood of in-hospital mortality (22% vs 9%), longer ICU length of stay (4.9 vs 2.2 days), and longer posttransfer length of stay (26.4 vs 14.7 days) compared with controls (P < .03 for each).
AHRQ-funded; HS023827.
Citation: Hussain FS, Sosa T, Ambroggio L .
Emergency transfers: an important predictor of adverse outcomes in hospitalized children.
J Hosp Med 2019 Aug;14(8):482-85. doi: 10.12788/jhm.3219..
Keywords: Transitions of Care, Children/Adolescents, Critical Care, Intensive Care Unit (ICU), Adverse Events, Outcomes, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research, Inpatient Care, Hospitalization, Hospitals, Healthcare Delivery
Wyatt DL
AHRQ Author: Wyatt DL
Employing technology to make care transitions safer.
This commentary discusses the potential for errors in patient handoffs; important information about medications and instructions regarding patient care may be overlooked when the patient is referred to special care, moved to a new hospital setting, or discharged. The problem is especially acute for patients with multiple chronic conditions who often undergo frequent transitions to new care settings and healthcare providers. The author describes AHRQ’s funding opportunities for health information technology interventions that aim to improve communication and coordination during care transitions, such as location-based smartphone alerts, a patient-centered discharge toolkit, and a ‘smart pillbox’ electronic medication adherence reporting project.
AHRQ-authored.
Citation: Wyatt DL .
Employing technology to make care transitions safer.
J Nurs Care Qual 2019 Jul/Sep;34(3):185-88. doi: 10.1097/ncq.0000000000000417..
Keywords: Adverse Events, Care Coordination, Chronic Conditions, Communication, Health Information Technology (HIT), Healthcare Delivery, Hospital Discharge, Medical Errors, Medication, Patient Safety, Transitions of Care
Joseph A, Khoshkenar A, Taaffe KM
Minor flow disruptions, traffic-related factors and their effect on major flow disruptions in the operating room.
This study researched the impact of minor flow disruptions (FDs) on operating room (OR) flow and how it contributes to an increase in serious adverse events. The rate of minor FDs increases the rate of major FDs. More major and minor FDs occur in the anesthesia area than in all other OR areas. They concluded that room design and layout issues contribute to those FDs and that is an important consideration in OR design.
AHRQ-funded; HS024380.
Citation: Joseph A, Khoshkenar A, Taaffe KM .
Minor flow disruptions, traffic-related factors and their effect on major flow disruptions in the operating room.
BMJ Qual Saf 2019 Apr;28(4):276-83. doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2018-007957.
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Keywords: Adverse Events, Healthcare Delivery, Patient Safety, Surgery, Workflow
Schiff G, Mirica MM, Dhavle AA
A prescription for enhancing electronic prescribing safety.
The authors review six areas in which electronic prescribing areas can be improved to transform medication ordering quality and safety. They recommend incorporating medication indications into electronic prescribing, establishing a single shared online medication list, implementing an electronic cancellation mechanism for pharmacies, implementing standardized structured and codified prescription instruction, reengineering clinical decision support, and redesigning electronic prescribing to facilitate ordering of nondrug alternatives.
AHRQ-funded; HS023694.
Citation: Schiff G, Mirica MM, Dhavle AA .
A prescription for enhancing electronic prescribing safety.
Health Aff 2018 Nov;37(11):1877-83. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2018.0725..
Keywords: Adverse Drug Events (ADE), Adverse Events, Health Information Technology (HIT), Healthcare Delivery, Medical Errors, Medication, Medication: Safety, Patient Safety
Metz TD, Gonzalez C, Allshouse AA
Influence of patient-level factors on mode of delivery among operative vaginal delivery candidates in modern practice.
This study aimed to evaluate which patient-level factors influence mode of delivery among candidates for operative vaginal delivery. Odds of forceps versus vacuum were higher with induction, nulliparity, epidural, maternal indication, older maternal age, and longer second stage. Odds of cesarean versus operative vaginal delivery were higher with maternal indication, a perinatologist, longer second stage, older gestational age and longer labor.
AHRQ-funded; HS022143.
Citation: Metz TD, Gonzalez C, Allshouse AA .
Influence of patient-level factors on mode of delivery among operative vaginal delivery candidates in modern practice.
Am J Perinatol 2017 Aug;34(10):974-81. doi: 10.1055/s-0037-1601441.
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Keywords: Adverse Events, Healthcare Delivery, Labor and Delivery, Pregnancy, Women