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. 2022 Oct;31(10):735-743.
doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2021-013683. Epub 2022 Mar 22.

Use of e-triggers to identify diagnostic errors in the paediatric ED

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Use of e-triggers to identify diagnostic errors in the paediatric ED

Daniel Lam et al. BMJ Qual Saf. 2022 Oct.

Abstract

Background: Diagnostic errors (DxEs) are an understudied source of patient harm in children rarely captured in current adverse event reporting systems. Applying electronic triggers (e-triggers) to electronic health records shows promise in identifying DxEs but has not been used in the emergency department (ED) setting.

Objectives: To assess the performance of an e-trigger and subsequent manual screening for identifying probable DxEs among children with unplanned admission following a prior ED visit and to compare performance to existing incident reporting systems.

Design/methods: Retrospective single-centre cohort study of children ages 0-22 admitted within 14 days of a previous ED visit between 1 January 2018 and 31 December 2019. Subjects were identified by e-trigger, screened to identify cases where index visit and hospital discharge diagnoses were potentially related but pathophysiologically distinct, and then these screened-in cases were reviewed for DxE using the SaferDx Instrument. Cases of DxE identified by e-trigger were cross-referenced against existing institutional incident reporting systems.

Results: An e-trigger identified 1915 unplanned admissions (7.7% of 24 849 total admissions) with a preceding index visit. 453 (23.7%) were screened in and underwent review using SaferDx. 92 cases were classified as likely DxEs, representing 0.4% of all hospital admissions, 4.8% among those selected by e-trigger and 20.3% among those screened in for review. Half of cases were reviewed by two reviewers using SaferDx with substantial inter-rater reliability (Cohen's κ=0.65 (95% CI 0.54 to 0.75)). Six (6.5%) cases had been reported elsewhere: two to the hospital's incident reporting system and five to the ED case review team (one reported to both).

Conclusion: An e-trigger coupled with manual screening enriched a cohort of patients at risk for DxEs. Fewer than 10% of DxEs were identified through existing surveillance systems, suggesting that they miss a large proportion of DxEs. Further study is required to identify specific clinical presentations at risk of DxEs.

Keywords: adverse events, epidemiology and detection; diagnostic errors; emergency department; incident reporting; paediatrics.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests: None declared.

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