Paediatric enteral feeding at home: an analysis of patient safety incidents.

<p>AIMS:To describe the nature and causes of patient safety incidents relating to care at home for children with enteral feeding devices.</p> <p>METHODS:We analysed incident data relating to paediatric nasogastric, gastrostomy or jejunostomy feeding at home from England and Wales&...

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Main Authors: Page, B, Nawaz, R, Haden, S, Vincent, C, Lee, A
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Journals 2019
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author Page, B
Nawaz, R
Haden, S
Vincent, C
Lee, A
author_facet Page, B
Nawaz, R
Haden, S
Vincent, C
Lee, A
author_sort Page, B
collection OXFORD
description <p>AIMS:To describe the nature and causes of patient safety incidents relating to care at home for children with enteral feeding devices.</p> <p>METHODS:We analysed incident data relating to paediatric nasogastric, gastrostomy or jejunostomy feeding at home from England and Wales' National Reporting and Learning System between August 2012 and July 2017. Manual screening by two authors identified 274 incidents which met the inclusion criteria. Each report was descriptively analysed to identify the problems in the delivery of care, the contributory factors and the patient outcome.</p> <p>RESULTS:The most common problems in care related to equipment and devices (n=98, 28%), procedures and treatments (n=86, 24%), information, training and support needs of families (n=54, 15%), feeds (n=52, 15%) and discharge from hospital (n=31, 9%). There was a clearly stated harm to the child in 52 incidents (19%). Contributory factors included staff/service availability, communication between services and the circumstances of the family carer.</p> <p>CONCLUSIONS:There are increasing numbers of children who require specialist medical care at home, yet little is known about safety in this context. This study identifies a range of safety concerns relating to enteral feeding which need further investigation and action. Priorities for improvement are handovers between hospital and community services, the training of family carers, the provision and expertise of services in the community, and the availability and reliability of equipment. Incident reports capture a tiny subset of the total number of adverse events occurring, meaning the scale of problems will be greater than the numbers suggest.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:dfcee6d7-31e5-4716-8599-0194129852f32022-03-27T09:42:07ZPaediatric enteral feeding at home: an analysis of patient safety incidents.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:dfcee6d7-31e5-4716-8599-0194129852f3EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordBMJ Journals2019Page, BNawaz, RHaden, SVincent, CLee, A <p>AIMS:To describe the nature and causes of patient safety incidents relating to care at home for children with enteral feeding devices.</p> <p>METHODS:We analysed incident data relating to paediatric nasogastric, gastrostomy or jejunostomy feeding at home from England and Wales' National Reporting and Learning System between August 2012 and July 2017. Manual screening by two authors identified 274 incidents which met the inclusion criteria. Each report was descriptively analysed to identify the problems in the delivery of care, the contributory factors and the patient outcome.</p> <p>RESULTS:The most common problems in care related to equipment and devices (n=98, 28%), procedures and treatments (n=86, 24%), information, training and support needs of families (n=54, 15%), feeds (n=52, 15%) and discharge from hospital (n=31, 9%). There was a clearly stated harm to the child in 52 incidents (19%). Contributory factors included staff/service availability, communication between services and the circumstances of the family carer.</p> <p>CONCLUSIONS:There are increasing numbers of children who require specialist medical care at home, yet little is known about safety in this context. This study identifies a range of safety concerns relating to enteral feeding which need further investigation and action. Priorities for improvement are handovers between hospital and community services, the training of family carers, the provision and expertise of services in the community, and the availability and reliability of equipment. Incident reports capture a tiny subset of the total number of adverse events occurring, meaning the scale of problems will be greater than the numbers suggest.</p>
spellingShingle Page, B
Nawaz, R
Haden, S
Vincent, C
Lee, A
Paediatric enteral feeding at home: an analysis of patient safety incidents.
title Paediatric enteral feeding at home: an analysis of patient safety incidents.
title_full Paediatric enteral feeding at home: an analysis of patient safety incidents.
title_fullStr Paediatric enteral feeding at home: an analysis of patient safety incidents.
title_full_unstemmed Paediatric enteral feeding at home: an analysis of patient safety incidents.
title_short Paediatric enteral feeding at home: an analysis of patient safety incidents.
title_sort paediatric enteral feeding at home an analysis of patient safety incidents
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