Repository logo
 
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Patient and hospital characteristics that influence incidence of adverse events in acute public hospitals in Portugal: a retrospective cohort study

Use this identifier to reference this record.

Advisor(s)

Abstract(s)

Objective: To analyse the variation in the rate of adverse events (AEs) between acute hospitals and explore the extent to which some patients and hospital characteristics influence the differences in the rates of AEs. Design: Retrospective cohort study. Chi-square test for independence and binary logistic regression models were used to identify the potential association of some patients and hospital characteristics with AEs. Setting: Nine acute Portuguese public hospital centres. Participants: A random sample of 4250 charts, representative of around 180 000 hospital admissions in 2013, was analysed. Intervention: To measure adverse events based on chart review. Main Outcome Measure: Rate of AEs. Results: Main results: (i) AE incidence was 12.5%; (ii) 66.4% of all AEs were related to Hospital-Acquired Infection and surgical procedures; (iii) patient characteristics such as sex (female 11%; male 14.4%), age (≥65 y 16.4%; <65 y 8.5%), admission coded as elective vs. urgent (8.6% vs. 14.6%) and medical vs. surgical Diagnosis Related Group code (13.4% vs. 11.7%), all with p < 0.001, were associated with a greater occurrence of AEs. (iv) hospital characteristics such as use of reporting system (13.2% vs. 7.1%), being accredited (13.7% vs. non-accredited 11.2%), university status (15.9% vs. non-university 10.9%) and hospital size (small 12.9%; medium 9.3%; large 14.3%), all with p < 0.001, seem to be associated with a higher rate of AEs. Conclusions: We identified some patient and hospital characteristics that might influence the rate of AEs. Based on these results, more adequate solutions to improve patient safety can be defined.

Description

Free PMC Article: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5890867/

Keywords

Accreditation Cohort Studies Cross Infection Female Hospitals, Public Hospitals, University Humans Male Medical Errors Patient Safety Portugal Surgical Procedures, Operative Cuidados de Saúde

Pedagogical Context

Citation

Int J Qual Health Care. 2018 Mar 1;30(2):132-137. doi: 10.1093/intqhc/mzx190.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Publisher

Oxford University Press/ International Society for Quality in Health Care

CC License

Altmetrics