A Mobile Application to Engage Families of Hospitalized Children in Safety Reporting
Over
250,000 US patients die yearly from medical errors, making errors a leading
cause of death. Families of hospitalized pediatric patients are high-yield
reporters of medical errors and adverse events (AEs). We previously found that
9-26% of families of hospitalized children report safety concerns, many of
which are otherwise undocumented. Families report similar rates of errors/AEs
as providers (when providers’ reports are actively solicited) and 3-5 times
higher rates than voluntary hospital incident reporting systems (which
typically exclude patients/families). However, family safety reporting has not
been operationalized in hospitals.
Leveraging
health information technology (IT) can help fill the gap between researching
and operationalizing family safety reporting. A few recent efforts to engage
adult patients/families in safety reporting through health IT demonstrate that
IT tools work well and identify important safety issues. However, these tools
suffer from poor reporting rates that are orders of magnitude lower than those
found in our prior research.
We
seek to leverage the efficiencies of health IT while incorporating lessons
learned in our research to develop a family safety reporting approach that is
active, health-literacy-informed, and engages families and interprofessional
team members in order to achieve—operationally—the high rates of reporting we
observed previously.
We
propose to develop a mobile family safety reporting application for routine
operational hospital use adapted from prior research and IT tools, bolstered
by: a health-literacy-informed curriculum to activate and educate families
about hospital safety, a program to train and encourage providers to engage
families in hospital safety, and a unit-wide, multimodal, interprofessional
safety culture campaign.
We
hypothesize that family safety reporting rates will increase significantly
following our intervention. By leveraging the unique expertise and partnership
of families, our project has the potential to identify and prevent medical
errors/AEs, thereby improving the safety and quality of care hospitals provide
to children.