Mr B, a 60-year-old man with back pain, was not informed of an incidental finding of a renal mass suggestive of cancer on a magnetic resonance imaging scan. Failure and delays in test follow-up are a frequent problem in medicine, occurring in more than 5% of significantly abnormal ambulatory test results. Rather than simply blaming involved clinicians, systems for managing tests need to be reengineered using methods from reliability sciences. These begin with investigations into the systemic causes of the failures, then application of approaches such as heightened situational awareness, closed-loop systems, improved handoffs, just-in-time work, culture and practices of stopping to fix problems, forcing functions and simplification, enhanced visual cues, and cautious use of information technology and redundancy, all while avoiding suboptimization. Emerging test management systems and critical test follow-up recommendations illustrate how applying these principles can enhance this important aspect of patient safety
Keywords : Adenoma,Oxyphilic,Back,Back Pain,Boston,Carcinoma,Renal Cell,Communication,Delayed Diagnosis,diagnosis,Hospitals,Humans,Incidental Findings,Interprofessional Relations,Kidney Neoplasms,Magnetic Resonance Imaging,Male,Medical Errors,methods,Middle Aged,Pain,prevention & control,Primary Health Care,Quality of Health Care,Referral and Consultation,Safety,Spinal Stenosis,surgery,therapy,Tomography,X-Ray Computed,, Error,60yearold,Man,With, pain relief patches uk
Date of Publication : 2011 May 11
Authors : Schiff GD;
Organisation : Center for Patient Safety Research and Practice, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02120, USA. gschiff@partners.org
Journal of Publication : JAMA
Pubmed Link : https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21486963
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