Patient safety: notification of incidents in the Intensive Care Unit
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17267/2317-3378rec.v8i1.2076Keywords:
Patient safety. Medical errors. Intensive Care Units. Medication errors. Phlebitis.Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe incident reporting in the intensive care unit after implementation of the National Patient Safety Program. METHOD: retrospective, descriptive study of a quantitative approach performed at the intensive care unit of a Private Hospital in the city of Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, in the months of November and December 2016. RESULTS: the incident sample was 210 notifications, which revealed 80% (n = 168) due to medication error. We found 11% (n= 23) notifications for device exteriorization; 4.8% (n = 10) for phlebitis and a total of 4.3% (n= 9) for pressure injury. There were no reports of falls in the study period. CONCLUSION: The survey of incident reports, even if there are underreporting, shows the type of care provided by the organization and the concern with patient safety.Downloads
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Published
04/11/2019
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Section
Original Articles
How to Cite
1.
Lordelo MV, Gama GGG. Patient safety: notification of incidents in the Intensive Care Unit. Rev Enf Contemp [Internet]. 2019 Apr. 11 [cited 2024 Nov. 22];8(1):33-40. Available from: https://journals.bahiana.edu.br/index.php/enfermagem/article/view/2076