The Harvard medical practice study trigger system performance in deceased patients

Dorthe O. Klein*, Roger J. M. W. Rennenberg, Richard P. Koopmans, Martin H. Prins

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

BackgroundTo detect possible threats to quality and safety, multiple systems have been developed. One of them is retrospective chart review. A team of experts scrutinizes medical records, selected by trigger systems, to detect possible adverse events (AEs). The most important AEs and more hints for possible improvement of care appear in deceased patients. Using triggers in a sample of these patients might increase the performance and lower the burden of scrutinizing records without possible preventable AEs. The aim of this study was therefore to determine the performance of the trigger system in a sample of deceased patients and to calculate the specificity and the sensitivity of this trigger system for predicting AEs.MethodsWe performed a study in which the records of deceased patients were screened for triggers by a team of trained nurses. A sample of 100 medical records was randomly selected out of records which had been screened between 2012 and 2015 for the first time, prior to the study in 2016. For the determination of significant differences between the first and second screening, McNemar's test of symmetry was used. Also, observed agreement, Cohen's Kappa and prevalence-adjusted and-bias-adjusted-kappa (PABAK) statistics were calculated. This was done for the two trigger rounds on both any trigger present and for every trigger separately.ResultsThe observed agreement for any given trigger was 75% with a Kappa and PABAK of 0.5. For the individual triggers, the observed agreement was on average 90%. The corresponding Kappa was on average 0.42 (range: -0.03-0.78) and the average PABAK was 0.8 (range: 0.44-0.92). Two adverse events were found in cases without triggers previously. The recalculated specificity and sensitivity for the original population were 58 and 92% respectively.ConclusionsFor the reproducibility of triggers it seems that some perform better than others, but on average this is to our opinion suboptimal. The low specificity implies that many records are selected without AEs. This leads to a high false-positive rate making this labour-intensive record review process costly. Therefore, research for better and more expedient systems is required.

Original languageEnglish
Article number16
Number of pages8
JournalBMC Health Services Research
Volume19
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 8 Jan 2019

Keywords

  • Medical record review
  • Reproducibility
  • Kappa
  • PABAK
  • Triggers
  • Hospital
  • POTENTIALLY PREVENTABLE DEATHS
  • ADVERSE EVENTS
  • HOSPITALIZED-PATIENTS
  • TOOL
  • SAFETY
  • HARM
  • METHODOLOGY
  • NEGLIGENCE
  • RATES
  • TIME

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