AAIM is the largest academically focused specialty organization representing departments of internal medicine at medical schools and teaching hospitals in the United States and Canada. As a consortium of five organizations, AAIM represents department chairs and chiefs; clerkship, residency, and fellowship program directors; division chiefs; and academic and business administrators as well as other faculty and staff in departments of internal medicine and their divisions.
144 Background: Enhancing patient safety can prevent unintended outcomes arising from defects in healthcare delivery systems. The Hematology/Oncology Patient Safety Committee (HOPSC) at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) is a multidisciplinary team of healthcare providers that meets monthly to review inpatient and outpatient adverse events, near misses, and medical errors that impact patient safety. Methods: Our aim was to quantify and qualify the cases that the HOPSC has reviewed from 2012-2013. In order to identify trends in event reporting, we reviewed the number of events reported to the HOPSC in both the inpatient and outpatient settings. We further subdivided events into two categories: medication-related and non-medication related. Additionally, we delineated which healthcare provider initiated the reporting of each event. Results: Over the two-year period, a total number of 1,061 events were reported to the HOPSC. Of these, 259 were medication-related events. Of the events reported, 40 were by a physician/NP and 1,021 were by a nurse. There was a discrepancy in the type of event reported (24.4% medication vs. 75.6% non-medication related) as well as in the type of reporter (3.8% physician/NP vs. 96.2% nurse). Of all the events reported, 8 were escalated to the Department of Medicine Peer Review Committee. Conclusions: Through review of healthcare provider event reports, the HOPSC has identified several types of adverse events and near misses in the Hematology/Oncology division at BIDMC. The events are mostly reported by inpatient nurses and are primarily medication-related. Given this skewed reporting pattern, we will investigate the reasons why reporting by physicians, especially in the outpatient setting, is limited. Our reported outline of the HOPSC operations may also guide oncology practices elsewhere in their own development of patient safety peer review committees. [Table: see text]
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