Patient and carer identified factors which contribute to safety incidents in primary care: a qualitative study

Background Patients can have an important role in reducing harm in primary-care settings. Learning from patient experience and feedback could improve patient safety. Evidence that captures patients’ views of the various contributory factors to creating safe primary care is largely absent. The aim of this study was to address this evidence gap. Methods Four focus groups and eight semistructured interviews were conducted with 34 patients and carers from south-east Australia. Participants were asked to describe their experiences of primary care. Audio recordings were transcribed verbatim and specific factors that contribute to safety incidents were identified in the analysis using the Yorkshire Contributory Factors Framework (YCFF). Other factors emerging from the data were also ascertained and added to the analytical framework. Results Thirteen factors that contribute to safety incidents in primary care were ascertained. Five unique factors for the primary-care setting were discovered in conjunction with eight factors present in the YCFF from hospital settings. The five unique primary care contributing factors to safety incidents represented a range of levels within the primary-care system from local working conditions to the upstream organisational level and the external policy context. The 13 factors included communication, access, patient factors, external policy context, dignity and respect, primary–secondary interface, continuity of care, task performance, task characteristics, time in the consultation, safety culture, team factors and the physical environment. Discussion Patient and carer feedback of this type could help primary-care professionals better understand and identify potential safety concerns and make appropriate service improvements. The comprehensive range of factors identified provides the groundwork for developing tools that systematically capture the multiple contributory factors to patient safety.

[1]  Hania Wehbe-Janek,et al.  Patients' Perspectives of Surgical Safety: Do They Feel Safe? , 2015, The Ochsner journal.

[2]  S. Campbell,et al.  Trust, temporality and systems: how do patients understand patient safety in primary care? A qualitative study , 2015, Health expectations : an international journal of public participation in health care and health policy.

[3]  R. McEachan,et al.  Evaluating the PRASE patient safety intervention - a multi-centre, cluster trial with a qualitative process evaluation: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial , 2014, Trials.

[4]  C. Walker,et al.  Patients' and carers' perceptions of safety in rural general practice , 2014, The Medical journal of Australia.

[5]  Alex Gillespie,et al.  Patient complaints in healthcare systems: a systematic review and coding taxonomy , 2014, BMJ quality & safety.

[6]  P. Bowie,et al.  Quality and safety issues highlighted by patients in the handling of laboratory test results by general practices–a qualitative study , 2014, BMC Health Services Research.

[7]  Ashley N. D. Meyer,et al.  The frequency of diagnostic errors in outpatient care: estimations from three large observational studies involving US adult populations , 2014, BMJ quality & safety.

[8]  R. McEachan,et al.  Developing a reliable and valid patient measure of safety in hospitals (PMOS): a validation study , 2013, BMJ quality & safety.

[9]  Francesca Moretti,et al.  How patients want their doctor to communicate. A literature review on primary care patients' perspective. , 2013, Patient education and counseling.

[10]  R. McEachan,et al.  Developing a patient measure of safety (PMOS) , 2013, BMJ quality & safety.

[11]  A. Darzi,et al.  Harnessing the cloud of patient experience: using social media to detect poor quality healthcare , 2013, BMJ quality & safety.

[12]  R. Iedema,et al.  Finding the patient in patient safety , 2013, Health.

[13]  Gijs Hesselink,et al.  The key actor: a qualitative study of patient participation in the handover process in Europe , 2012, BMJ quality & safety.

[14]  B. Franklin,et al.  Investigating the prevalence and causes of prescribing errors in general practice : the PRACtICe Study , 2012 .

[15]  Gerry Armitage,et al.  Can patients report patient safety incidents in a hospital setting? A systematic review , 2012, BMJ quality & safety.

[16]  R. McEachan,et al.  Development of an evidence-based framework of factors contributing to patient safety incidents in hospital settings: a systematic review , 2012, BMJ quality & safety.

[17]  M.B. Aller,et al.  What do we know about patients' perceptions of continuity of care? A meta-synthesis of qualitative studies. , 2012, International journal for quality in health care : journal of the International Society for Quality in Health Care.

[18]  Diana Jones,et al.  Do older patients' perceptions of safety highlight barriers that could make their care safer during organisational care transfers? , 2011, BMJ quality & safety.

[19]  Leora I Horwitz,et al.  Advanced access scheduling outcomes: a systematic review. , 2011, Archives of internal medicine.

[20]  R. McEachan,et al.  Patient involvement in patient safety: Protocol for developing an intervention using patient reports of organisational safety and patient incident reporting , 2011, BMC health services research.

[21]  Navjyot Hansi,et al.  Process mapping the patient journey: an introduction , 2010, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[22]  Glyn Lewis,et al.  The patient-doctor relationship: a synthesis of the qualitative literature on patients' perspectives. , 2009, The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners.

[23]  N. MacKinnon,et al.  The Medical Home in Canada: Patient Perceptions of Quality and Safety , 2009, Healthcare management forum.

[24]  L. White,et al.  A critical review of patient satisfaction , 2009 .

[25]  Kaveh G Shojania,et al.  The frustrating case of incident-reporting systems , 2008, Quality & Safety in Health Care.

[26]  J. Coyle Exploring the Meaning of ‘Dissatisfaction’ with Health Care: The Importance of ‘Personal Identity Threat’ , 2008 .

[27]  T. Bodenheimer Coordinating care--a perilous journey through the health care system. , 2008, The New England journal of medicine.

[28]  G. Elwyn,et al.  Respecting the subjective: quality measurement from the patient's perspective , 2007, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[29]  Charles Vincent,et al.  Incident reporting and patient safety , 2007, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[30]  P. Carayon,et al.  Work system design for patient safety: the SEIPS model , 2006, Quality and Safety in Health Care.

[31]  C. Vincent,et al.  Systems analysis of clinical incidents: the London protocol , 2004 .

[32]  S. Woolf,et al.  Patient Reports of Preventable Problems and Harms in Primary Health Care , 2004, The Annals of Family Medicine.

[33]  J. Wisnivesky,et al.  Medical errors related to discontinuity of care from an inpatient to an outpatient setting , 2003, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[34]  S. Dovey,et al.  Classification of medical errors and preventable adverse events in primary care: a synthesis of the literature. , 2002, The Journal of family practice.

[35]  S. Dovey,et al.  An international taxonomy for errors in general practice: a pilot study , 2002, The Medical journal of Australia.

[36]  L. Kohn,et al.  To Err Is Human : Building a Safer Health System , 2007 .

[37]  J. Reason Human error: models and management , 2000, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[38]  C. Vincent,et al.  Framework for analysing risk and safety in clinical medicine. , 1998, BMJ.

[39]  D. Morgan,et al.  Sharing the caring: family caregivers' views of their relationships with nursing home staff. , 1994, The Gerontologist.

[40]  R. Lawton,et al.  The role of the patient in clinical safety , 2012 .

[41]  J. Ivey Focus groups. , 2011, Pediatric nursing.

[42]  T. Lagu,et al.  Patients’ Evaluations of Health Care Providers in the Era of Social Networking: An Analysis of Physician-Rating Websites , 2010, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[43]  Theresa Hydes,et al.  Process mapping the patient journey through health care: an introduction , 2010 .

[44]  P. Maurette,et al.  [To err is human: building a safer health system]. , 2002, Annales francaises d'anesthesie et de reanimation.