TY - JOUR
T1 - Patterns of Incident Reporting Across Clinical Sites in a Regionally Expanding Academic Radiation Oncology Department
AU - Rhieu, Byung Han
AU - Terezakis, Stephanie A
AU - Greco, Stephen
AU - Deville, Curtiland
AU - Souranis, Annette N.
AU - Choflet, Amanda
AU - DeWeese, Theodore L.
AU - Viswanathan, Akila N.
AU - Laub, Wolfram
AU - McNutt, Todd R.
AU - Wright, Jean L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019
PY - 2019/7
Y1 - 2019/7
N2 - Purpose: We evaluated patterns of event reporting across five clinical locations within an academic radiation oncology department, with the goal of better understanding variability across sites. Methods and Materials: We analyzed 1,351 events reported to a departmental incident learning system over 1 calendar year across the five locations with respect to volume of events, event type, process map location of origin and detection, and event reporter. Results: We found marked variability in reporting patterns, including reporting rate, event type, event severity, event location of origin and detection within the departmental process map, and discipline of event reporters. These differences relate both to variability in process and workflow (reflected by frequency of specific workflow events at each site) and in reporting culture (reflected by volume or rate of event reporting, and discipline of event reporter). Conclusions: These data highlight the variability in reporting culture even within a single department, and therefore the need to tailor and individualize safety and quality programs to the unique clinical site, with the long-term goal of achieving a common culture of safety while supporting unique processes at individual locations. This work also raises concern about extrapolating single-institution incident learning system results without understanding the unique workflow and culture of clinical sites.
AB - Purpose: We evaluated patterns of event reporting across five clinical locations within an academic radiation oncology department, with the goal of better understanding variability across sites. Methods and Materials: We analyzed 1,351 events reported to a departmental incident learning system over 1 calendar year across the five locations with respect to volume of events, event type, process map location of origin and detection, and event reporter. Results: We found marked variability in reporting patterns, including reporting rate, event type, event severity, event location of origin and detection within the departmental process map, and discipline of event reporters. These differences relate both to variability in process and workflow (reflected by frequency of specific workflow events at each site) and in reporting culture (reflected by volume or rate of event reporting, and discipline of event reporter). Conclusions: These data highlight the variability in reporting culture even within a single department, and therefore the need to tailor and individualize safety and quality programs to the unique clinical site, with the long-term goal of achieving a common culture of safety while supporting unique processes at individual locations. This work also raises concern about extrapolating single-institution incident learning system results without understanding the unique workflow and culture of clinical sites.
KW - RO-ILS
KW - Radiation oncology incident learning system
KW - safety research
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jacr.2018.12.010
DO - 10.1016/j.jacr.2018.12.010
M3 - Article
C2 - 30738769
AN - SCOPUS:85061063691
SN - 1558-349X
VL - 16
SP - 915
EP - 921
JO - Journal of the American College of Radiology
JF - Journal of the American College of Radiology
IS - 7
ER -