Contributing causes to adverse events in home care and potential interventions to reduce their incidence

The increasing complexity of home care services, pressures to discharge patients quicker, and the growing vulnerabilities of home care clients all contribute to adverse events in home care. In this article, home care staff in six programs analyzed 27 fall- and medication-related events. Classification of contributing causes indicates that patient and environmental factors were common in fall events, while organization and management factors along with patient, task, team, and individual factors were common in medication-related events. Home care settings create specific challenges in identifying and mitigating risks. Some factors, such as variations in home environments, are difficult to address. However, changing care coordination structures and communication methods could ameliorate other factors, including poor communications among staff and limited team and cross-sector communication and coordination. Ensuring that medication ordering and administration processes are optimized for home environments would also contribute to safer care.

[1]  M. Ekstedt,et al.  Safe medication management in specialized home healthcare - an observational study , 2017, BMC Health Services Research.

[2]  M. Spinks,et al.  Associations between patient factors and adverse events in the home care setting: a secondary data analysis of two canadian adverse event studies , 2017, BMC Health Services Research.

[3]  D. Guthrie,et al.  A comparison of home care quality indicator rates in two Canadian provinces , 2014, BMC Health Services Research.

[4]  Lori A. Mitchell,et al.  Assessing adverse events among home care clients in three Canadian provinces using chart review , 2013, BMJ quality & safety.

[5]  Lori A. Mitchell,et al.  Adverse events among Ontario home care clients associated with emergency room visit or hospitalization: a retrospective cohort study , 2013, BMC Health Services Research.

[6]  Jan Barnsley,et al.  The incidence of adverse events among home care patients. , 2013, International journal for quality in health care : journal of the International Society for Quality in Health Care.

[7]  Kurt E. Hersberger,et al.  Medikationssicherheit im Home-Care-Bereich: Identifikation von kritischen Prozessschritten , 2012 .

[8]  S. Bentsen,et al.  Patient safety and falls: a qualitative study of home care nurses in Norway. , 2012, Nursing & health sciences.

[9]  Michael Green,et al.  Adverse events experienced by homecare patients: a scoping review of the literature. , 2010, International journal for quality in health care : journal of the International Society for Quality in Health Care.

[10]  Keir G. Johnson Adverse events among Winnipeg Home Care clients. , 2006, Healthcare quarterly.

[11]  C. Vincent Understanding and responding to adverse events. , 2003, The New England journal of medicine.

[12]  D. Hewett,et al.  How to investigate and analyse clinical incidents: Clinical Risk Unit and Association of Litigation and Risk Management protocol , 2000, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[13]  C. Meyer-Massetti,et al.  [Medication safety in the home care setting: error-prone process steps]. , 2012, Pflege.