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Family Safety Reporting in Hospitalized Children With Medical Complexity

Authors :
Alexandra N. Mercer
Sangeeta Mauskar
Jennifer Baird
Jay Berry
Deanna Chieco
Katherine Copp
Elizabeth D. Cox
Helen Haskell
Karen Hennessy
Michelle M. Kelly
Nandini Mallick
Amanda McGeachey
Patrice Melvin
Tiffany Ngo
Amy Pinkham
Jayne Rogers
Walter Wickremasinghe
David Williams
Christopher P. Landrigan
Alisa Khan
Source :
Pediatrics. 150
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), 2022.

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Hospitalized children with medical complexity (CMC) are at high risk of medical errors. Their families are an underutilized source of hospital safety data. We evaluated safety concerns from families of hospitalized CMC and patient/parent characteristics associated with family safety concerns. METHODS We conducted a 12-month prospective cohort study of English- and Spanish-speaking parents/staff of hospitalized CMC on 5 units caring for complex care patients at a tertiary care children’s hospital. Parents completed safety and experience surveys predischarge. Staff completed surveys during meetings and shifts. Mixed-effects logistic regression with random intercepts controlling for clustering and other patient/parent factors evaluated associations between family safety concerns and patient/parent characteristics. RESULTS A total of 155 parents and 214 staff completed surveys (>89% response rates). 43% (n = 66) had ≥1 hospital safety concerns, totaling 115 concerns (1–6 concerns each). On physician review, 69% of concerns were medical errors and 22% nonsafety-related quality issues. Most parents (68%) reported concerns to staff, particularly bedside nurses. Only 32% of parents recalled being told how to report safety concerns. Higher education (adjusted odds ratio 2.94, 95% confidence interval [1.21–7.14], P = .02) and longer length of stay (3.08 [1.29–7.38], P = .01) were associated with family safety concerns. CONCLUSIONS Although parents of CMC were infrequently advised about how to report safety concerns, they frequently identified medical errors during hospitalization. Hospitals should provide clear mechanisms for families, particularly of CMC and those from disadvantaged backgrounds, to share safety concerns. Actively engaging patients/families in reporting will allow hospitals to develop a more comprehensive, patient-centered view of safety.

Details

ISSN :
10984275 and 00314005
Volume :
150
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....efe76867341434834cde08e545cb4847
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2021-055098