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Adverse events in anaesthetic practice : qualitative study of definition, discussion and reporting.

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Adverse events in anaesthetic practice : qualitative study of definition, discussion and reporting. / Smith, Andrew F.; Goodwin, Dawn; Mort, Maggie et al.
In: British Journal of Anaesthesia, Vol. 96, No. 6, 06.2006, p. 715-721.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Smith, AF, Goodwin, D, Mort, M & Pope, C 2006, 'Adverse events in anaesthetic practice : qualitative study of definition, discussion and reporting.', British Journal of Anaesthesia, vol. 96, no. 6, pp. 715-721. https://doi.org/10.1093/bja/ael099

APA

Vancouver

Smith AF, Goodwin D, Mort M, Pope C. Adverse events in anaesthetic practice : qualitative study of definition, discussion and reporting. British Journal of Anaesthesia. 2006 Jun;96(6):715-721. doi: 10.1093/bja/ael099

Author

Smith, Andrew F. ; Goodwin, Dawn ; Mort, Maggie et al. / Adverse events in anaesthetic practice : qualitative study of definition, discussion and reporting. In: British Journal of Anaesthesia. 2006 ; Vol. 96, No. 6. pp. 715-721.

Bibtex

@article{a7e42b8df0794ad5a03738352f7889c2,
title = "Adverse events in anaesthetic practice : qualitative study of definition, discussion and reporting.",
abstract = "Background. This study aimed to explore how critical and acceptable practice are defined in anaesthesia and how this influences the discussion and reporting of adverse incidents. Method. We conducted workplace observations of, and interviews with, anaesthetists and anaesthetic staff. Transcripts were analysed qualitatively for recurrent themes and quantitatively for adverse events in anaesthetic process witnessed. We also observed departmental audit meetings and analysed meeting minutes and report forms. Results. The educational value of discussing events was well-recognized; 28 events were discussed at departmental meetings, of which 5 (18%) were presented as {\textquoteleft}critical incidents{\textquoteright}. However, only one incident was reported formally. Our observations of anaesthetic practice revealed 103 minor events during the course of over 50 anaesthetic procedures, but none were acknowledged as offering the potential to improve safety, although some were direct violations of {\textquoteleft}acceptable{\textquoteright} practice. Formal reporting appears to be constrained by changing boundaries of what might be considered {\textquoteleft}critical{\textquoteright}, by concerns of loss of control over formally reported incidents and by the perception that reporting schemes outside anaesthesia have purposes other than education. Conclusions. Despite clear official definitions of criticality in anaesthesia, there is ambiguity in how these are applied in practice. Many educationally useful events fall outside critical incident reporting schemes. Professional expertise in anaesthesia brings its own implicit safety culture but the reluctance to adopt a more explicit {\textquoteleft}systems approach{\textquoteright} to adverse events may impede further gains in patient safety in anaesthesia.",
author = "Smith, {Andrew F.} and Dawn Goodwin and Maggie Mort and C. Pope",
year = "2006",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1093/bja/ael099",
language = "English",
volume = "96",
pages = "715--721",
journal = "British Journal of Anaesthesia",
issn = "1471-6771",
publisher = "ELSEVIER SCI LTD",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Adverse events in anaesthetic practice : qualitative study of definition, discussion and reporting.

AU - Smith, Andrew F.

AU - Goodwin, Dawn

AU - Mort, Maggie

AU - Pope, C.

PY - 2006/6

Y1 - 2006/6

N2 - Background. This study aimed to explore how critical and acceptable practice are defined in anaesthesia and how this influences the discussion and reporting of adverse incidents. Method. We conducted workplace observations of, and interviews with, anaesthetists and anaesthetic staff. Transcripts were analysed qualitatively for recurrent themes and quantitatively for adverse events in anaesthetic process witnessed. We also observed departmental audit meetings and analysed meeting minutes and report forms. Results. The educational value of discussing events was well-recognized; 28 events were discussed at departmental meetings, of which 5 (18%) were presented as ‘critical incidents’. However, only one incident was reported formally. Our observations of anaesthetic practice revealed 103 minor events during the course of over 50 anaesthetic procedures, but none were acknowledged as offering the potential to improve safety, although some were direct violations of ‘acceptable’ practice. Formal reporting appears to be constrained by changing boundaries of what might be considered ‘critical’, by concerns of loss of control over formally reported incidents and by the perception that reporting schemes outside anaesthesia have purposes other than education. Conclusions. Despite clear official definitions of criticality in anaesthesia, there is ambiguity in how these are applied in practice. Many educationally useful events fall outside critical incident reporting schemes. Professional expertise in anaesthesia brings its own implicit safety culture but the reluctance to adopt a more explicit ‘systems approach’ to adverse events may impede further gains in patient safety in anaesthesia.

AB - Background. This study aimed to explore how critical and acceptable practice are defined in anaesthesia and how this influences the discussion and reporting of adverse incidents. Method. We conducted workplace observations of, and interviews with, anaesthetists and anaesthetic staff. Transcripts were analysed qualitatively for recurrent themes and quantitatively for adverse events in anaesthetic process witnessed. We also observed departmental audit meetings and analysed meeting minutes and report forms. Results. The educational value of discussing events was well-recognized; 28 events were discussed at departmental meetings, of which 5 (18%) were presented as ‘critical incidents’. However, only one incident was reported formally. Our observations of anaesthetic practice revealed 103 minor events during the course of over 50 anaesthetic procedures, but none were acknowledged as offering the potential to improve safety, although some were direct violations of ‘acceptable’ practice. Formal reporting appears to be constrained by changing boundaries of what might be considered ‘critical’, by concerns of loss of control over formally reported incidents and by the perception that reporting schemes outside anaesthesia have purposes other than education. Conclusions. Despite clear official definitions of criticality in anaesthesia, there is ambiguity in how these are applied in practice. Many educationally useful events fall outside critical incident reporting schemes. Professional expertise in anaesthesia brings its own implicit safety culture but the reluctance to adopt a more explicit ‘systems approach’ to adverse events may impede further gains in patient safety in anaesthesia.

U2 - 10.1093/bja/ael099

DO - 10.1093/bja/ael099

M3 - Journal article

VL - 96

SP - 715

EP - 721

JO - British Journal of Anaesthesia

JF - British Journal of Anaesthesia

SN - 1471-6771

IS - 6

ER -