nurses experience of incident reporting f donaldson myles

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A Qualitative Study of A Qualitative Study of Nurses’ Experience of Nurses’ Experience of Clinical Incident & Clinical Incident & Error Reporting Error Reporting Fiona Donaldson-Myles MSc Fiona Donaldson-Myles MSc RGN RM RGN RM Supervisor of Midwives Supervisor of Midwives SSAFA Forces Help SSAFA Forces Help

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Page 1: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

A Qualitative Study of A Qualitative Study of Nurses’ Experience of Nurses’ Experience of

Clinical Incident & Error Clinical Incident & Error ReportingReporting

Fiona Donaldson-Myles MSc Fiona Donaldson-Myles MSc RGN RMRGN RM

Supervisor of MidwivesSupervisor of Midwives

SSAFA Forces HelpSSAFA Forces Help

Page 2: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles
Page 3: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles
Page 4: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

It is a key organisational aim to ensure clinical incidents are reported, lessons learned and findings disseminated to improve patient care

Page 5: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

A better understanding of how staff feel when they have been involved in reporting an error will help develop an effective reporting and learning culture

Page 6: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

A clinical incident reporting system should:

• Capture adverse incidents and near misses

• Give staff support and have their confidence.

• Encourage learning and improve patient safety

Page 7: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

The second victim - cost of clinical incidents to carers

Doctors

–Inability to share feelings

–Feelings of guilt, remorse, helplessness

–Lack of institutional mechanisms for support

–Defensive changes

Page 8: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

The second victim - cost of clinical incidents to carers

Nurses

–Similar emotions to doctor

–Better informal support

–Fearful of arbitrary disciplinary action

–Mainly medication errors studied

Page 9: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Study Aim

• To obtain and analyse rich data on the experience of nurses involved in reporting clinical incidents

• To gain insight into how the process was managed

• To identify factors that foster a reflective environment and give staff confidence to report adverse events

Page 10: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Methodology

• Qualitative phenomenological study• Participants identified from anonymised first

person incident reports• Informed consent, written information, 3rd party

introduction• Semi-structured interview tool• Taped interviews• Grounded theory approach

Page 11: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Demographic Data of Respondents

Number invited to participate 35

Number who agreed to participate 18

Number of actual participants 15

Average age (years) 42 (range 32 – 50)

Nursing grades I -1, H -2, G -3, F -2, E -6, D-1

Average years in practice 20 (range 2 – 31)

Clinical area Acute medicine 5

Care of elderly 3

Community hospital 2

Oncology/palliative 2

Nurse practitioner 2

Specialist nurse 1

Page 12: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Six key themes revealed

• Nurses’ expectations of management• Motivation to report• Effects on nurses’ feelings &

emotions• The need for support• Learning from mistakes• Views on patient involvement

Page 13: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Expectations of Management

• Nurses felt managerial feedback insufficient• Nurses wanted to know if any further action

was being taken involving them or to prevent recurrence

• Copy of report inadequate• Needed ‘closure’ on episode• Did not want copy of report freely available to

others

Page 14: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Expectations of Management

“They dealt with it at ward level. I am happy with that and they said it was the end of the matter.”

“I have got a very supportive ward manager, we discussed it, I had to write a report to the people who deal with risk management and the ward manager told me it was the end of the matter.”

“I am hoping that that is it now, and that it is finished. I do not know for certain how far management are taking it.”

“I suppose no news is good news……….”

Page 15: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Motivation to Report

• Nurses want to do their best for patients

• Want to prevent same mistakes happening again

• Not convinced enough being done in response to report

• Not involved enough in rectifying situation

• Report can clarify what actually happened

Page 16: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Motivation to Report

“I think it is important to find out why things happen”

“It needed to be addressed to prevent the same thing happening again”

“It’s happened on many occasions since, but it doesn’t seem to be taken seriously”

“I knew it was a mistake. I was comfortable to report it, but I wanted it written down the way it really happened”

Page 17: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Effects on Nurses’ Feelings and Emotions

• Thirteen out of fifteen nurses described personal impact in very strong terms

• Used phrases such as:– “feeling sick”

– “panic stricken”

– “never feeling the same again”

Page 18: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Effects on Nurses’ Feelings and Emotions

• Strong negative feelings regardless of outcome

• Primary incidents - blamed themselves• Secondary incidents - feelings of

powerlessness• Negative feelings related to:

– type of incident– how much early support received– Whether still felt trusted by colleagues

Page 19: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Effects on Nurses’ Feelings and Emotions

“I was absolutely gutted about the thought that I had hurt him. He was quite poorly and didn’t really know, but it still upsets me”

“The patient was not adversely affected, but the nurse was absolutely devastated”

Page 20: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Need for Support

• Need to talk to someone knowledgeable

• Explore issues and relieve feelings

• Face-to-face preferable but telephone and written response helped keep feelings in perspective

• Only nursing / medical family members helpful

• Inadequate support led to unresolved feelings of distress

Page 21: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Need for Support

“I have got a very supportive ward manager. We discussed it with her and that was very good.”

“There was nobody I could talk to. My manager was not available and everyone was busy. There was nobody to give me any reassurance or an explanation.”

“I did not have that much support. I mean, people realised I wasn’t happy, you know, but they did not sit me down and say, ‘look, we need to talk this over’.”

Page 22: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Suggestions for providing immediate support

• 24 hour availability of senior nurse / risk manager

• Telephone helpline

• Protected time for clinical supervision

Page 23: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Learning from Mistakes

• Despite negative feelings, viewed reporting process as a learning episode

• Reassessment / training helped regain confidence and trust

• Became more cautious about tasks taken for granted

• Became more assertive• Wanted information regarding tracking trends

and corporate lessons learned

Page 24: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Learning from Mistakes

“we all make mistakes, we learn, get through them and move on”

“I check, check, double check, triple check, I’m obsessive really now”

Page 25: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Views on Patient Involvement

Nurses felt:

• Errors should be disclosed to patients more frequently

• Patients coped well with open dialogue

• Less likely to take further action

• Could contribute to more realistic patient expectations

Page 26: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Views on Patient Involvement

“I think it would be nice if the patient got some formal feedback. I think an apology or an explanation would have been helpful and help acknowledge the discomfort and distress he was put through.”

“I think I should have told her. Once they know the truth and you say you are sorry, on the whole they are happy”

Page 27: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Conclusions• Motivation to report was to prevent similar occurrence

• Frustrated by inadequate managerial feedback

• Supported at ward level, but not higher

• Strong personal and professional impact

• Immediate support, clear communication and feedback facilitated movement to learning phase

• Consensus that incidents should be discussed more with patients

• Overwhelmingly rejected system of incident book stored on ward

Page 28: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Limitations

• Small study / discrete setting

• Findings could reflect organisational, regional, national characteristics

• May not be generalisable

• Participants relatively old and experienced

Page 29: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

Recommendations

• More should be done to reduce negative psychological and professional impact on nurses

• Devise a system which gives vital early support:– 24 hour helpline– 24 hour availability of senior nurse/risk manager– Extension of clinical supervision

• Keep nurses informed of organisational action• Discontinue incident book system• Widen debate on extent to which information on

errors should be shared with patients

Page 30: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles

SUPPORT AND COMMUNICATION

SUPPORT AND COMMUNICATION

SUPPORT AND COMMUNICATION

Page 31: Nurses Experience of Incident Reporting f Donaldson Myles