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Our first review: An evaluation of effectiveness of root cause analysis recommendations in Hong Kong public hospitals

Kwok, YTA, Mah, Alastair and Pang, KMC 2020, Our first review: An evaluation of effectiveness of root cause analysis recommendations in Hong Kong public hospitals, BMC Health Services Research, vol. 20, pp. 1-9, doi: 10.1186/s12913-020-05356-6.

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Title Our first review: An evaluation of effectiveness of root cause analysis recommendations in Hong Kong public hospitals
Author(s) Kwok, YTA
Mah, Alastair
Pang, KMC
Journal name BMC Health Services Research
Volume number 20
Start page 1
End page 9
Total pages 9
Publisher BioMed Central
Place of publication London, Eng.
Publication date 2020
ISSN 1472-6963
Keyword(s) Hong Kong
Incident investigation
Patient harm
Patient safety
Root cause analysis
Sentinel events
Summary Background: To evaluate the effectiveness of root cause analysis (RCA) recommendations and propose possible ways to enhance its quality in Hong Kong public hospitals. Methods: A retrospective cross-sectional study was performed across 43 public hospitals and institutes in Hong Kong, reviewing RCA reports of all Sentinel Events and Serious Untoward Events within a two-year period. The incident nature, types of root causes and strengths of recommendations were analysed. The RCA recommendations were categorised as 'strong', 'medium' or 'weak' strengths utilizing the US's Veteran Affairs National Center for Patient Safety action hierarchy. Results: A total of 214 reports from October 2016 to September 2018 were reviewed. These reports generated 504 root causes, averaging 2.4 per RCA report, and comprising 249 (49%) system, 233 (46%) staff behavioural and 22 (4%) patient factors. There were 760 recommendations identified in the RCA reports with an average of 3.6 per RCA. Of these, 18 (2%) recommendations were rated strong, 116 (15%) medium and 626 (82%) weak. Most recommendations were related to 'training and education' (466, 61%), 'additional study/review' (104, 14%) and 'review/enhancement of policy/guideline' (39, 5%). Conclusions: This study provided insights about the effectiveness of RCA recommendations across all public hospitals in Hong Kong. The results showed a high proportion of root causes were attributed to staff behavioural factors and most of the recommendations were weak. The reasons include the lack of training, tools and expertise, appropriateness of panel composition, and complicated processes in carrying out large scale improvements. The Review Team suggested conducting regular RCA training, adopting easy-to-use tools, enhancing panel composition with human factors expertise, promoting an organization-wide safety culture to staff and aggregating analysis of incidents as possible improvement actions.
Language eng
DOI 10.1186/s12913-020-05356-6
Field of Research 0807 Library and Information Studies
1110 Nursing
1117 Public Health and Health Services
HERDC Research category C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Free to Read? Yes
Persistent URL http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30159586

Document type: Journal Article
Collections: Faculty of Health
School of Medicine
Open Access Collection
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Created: Mon, 29 Nov 2021, 11:03:19 EST

Every reasonable effort has been made to ensure that permission has been obtained for items included in DRO. If you believe that your rights have been infringed by this repository, please contact drosupport@deakin.edu.au.