PATIENT ACCIDENTS IN HOSPITAL: INCIDENCE,DOCUMENTATION AND SIGNIFICANCE |
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Authors: | JC Sutton PhD PJ Standen PhD WA Wallace FRCS(Ed) |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Public Health Medicine, Leicestershire Health Authority, Leicester;2. Department of Learning Disabilities, Queen's Medical Centre, University of Nottingham, Nottingham;3. Department of Orthopaedic and Accident Surgery, Queen's Medical Centre, University of Nottingham, Nottingham |
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Abstract: | SUMMARY Many previous studies of reported patient accidents in hospital used the accident report forms as the only data source, without questioning their reliability and despite 80% of the accidents being unwitnessed. This paper reports on three studies using data from patient interviews, staff questionnaires, medical and nursing notes and the accident report forms. The studies confirm that falls amongst elderly patients are the most common type of patient accident. However, patients' and staff's versions of the event often differed widely. Accident reports are stated to be required for legal purposes, but they were often incomplete and unreliable. Patient accidents and safety are too important to remain marginalised to mere compliance with out-of-date regulations. A new, ‘slim-line‘, more accurate but less time-consuming patient accident reporting system should be developed, for which improvement in patient safety is the main aim and legal considerations the secondary aim. |
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