Summary
Interest in the field of patient safety incident reporting and analysis with respect
to Health Information Technology (HIT) has been growing over recent years as the development,
implementation and reliance on HIT systems becomes ever more prevalent. One of the
rationales for capturing patient safety incidents is to learn from failures in the
delivery of care and must form part of a feedback loop which also includes analysis;
investigation and monitoring. With the advent of new technologies and organizational
programs of delivery the emphasis is increasingly upon analyzing HIT incidents.
This thematic review had two objectives, to test the applicability of a framework
specifically designed to categorize HIT incidents and to review the Welsh incidents
as communicated via the national incident reporting system in order to understand
their implications for healthcare. The incidents were those reported as IT/ telecommunications
failure/ overload. Incidents were searched for within a national reporting system
using a standardized search strategy for incidents occurring between 1st January 2009 and 31st May 2011. 149 incident reports were identified and classified. The majority (77%)
of which were machine related (technical problems) such as access problems; computer
system down/too slow; display issues; and software malfunctions. A further 10% (n
= 15) of incidents were down to human-computer interaction issues and 13% (n = 19)
incidents, mainly telephone related, could not be classified using the framework being
tested.
On the basis of this review of incidents, it is recommended that the framework be
expanded to include hardware malfunctions and the wrong record retrieved/missing data
associated with a machine output error (as opposed to human error).
In terms of the implications for clinical practice, the incidents reviewed highlighted
critical issues including the access problems particularly relating to the use of
mobile technologies.
Keywords
Medical informatics - Patient Safety - Risk Management - Incident Reporting - Wales