Healthcare Worker Serious Safety Events: Applying Concepts from Patient Safety to Improve Healthcare Worker Safety.

2021 
Introduction Patient safety has improved pediatric healthcare by defining when patient safety events meet criteria as serious safety events (SSEs). Similar concepts apply to healthcare worker (HCW) safety. We describe the newly designed process for HCW injury reporting, the process for evaluating HCW SSEs, and early experience with the new systems. Methods The work to redesign our approach to HCW safety included 2 parts: (1) process flow mapping and redesigning the work for HCW injury reporting; and (2) creating a process to categorize HCW injuries and determine when such injuries rise to a HCW SSE level. We evaluated the mean time per month from HCW injury to reporting and compared those values during the postimplementation time. We also evaluated the team's experience with the first 4 potential HCW SSEs. Results By improving the process flow, the mean time to reporting decreased significantly from 28 days implementation time-period (September-October 2019) to 9 days during the postimplementation time-period (November 2019-May 2020) (P = 0.0002). Of the first 4 HCW events identified and reviewed as possible HCW SSE events, there were 2 defined as HCW SSE level 4, one defined as a precursor event, and one defined as a nonsafety event. Conclusion Adapting infrastructure and definitions used previously to improve patient safety can improve HCW safety.
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