TY - JOUR
T1 - 所报道患者家中用药事件的促成因素–文本挖掘分析
AU - Härkänen, Marja
AU - Franklin, Bryony Dean
AU - Murrells, Trevor
AU - Rafferty, Anne Marie
AU - Vehviläinen-Julkunen, Katri
PY - 2020/12/1
Y1 - 2020/12/1
N2 - Aims: To describe the characteristics of medication administration (MA) incidents reported to have occurred in patients’ own homes (reporters’ profession, incident types, contributing factors, patient consequence, and most common medications involved) and to identify the connection terms related to the most common contributing factors based on free text descriptions. Design: A retrospective study using descriptive statistical analysis and text mining. Methods: Medication administration incidents (N = 19,725) reported to have occurred in patients’ homes between 2013–2018 in one district in Finland were analysed, describing the data by the reporters’ occupation, incident type, contributing factors, and patient consequence. SAS® Text Miner was used to analyse free text descriptions of the MA incidents to understand contributing factors, using concept linking. Results: Most MA incidents were reported by practical (lower level) nurses (77.8%, N = 15,349). The most common category of harm was ‘mild harm’ (40.1%, N = 7,915) and the most common error type was omissions of drug doses (47.4%, N = 9,343). The medications most commonly described were Marevan [warfarin] (N = 2,668), insulin (N = 811), Furesis [furosemide] (N = 590), antibiotic (N = 446), and Panadol [paracetamol] (N = 416). The contributing factors most commonly reported were ‘communication and flow of information’ (25.5%, N = 5,038), ‘patient and relatives’ (22.6%, N = 4,451), ‘practices’ (9.9%, N = 1,959), ‘education and training’ (4.8%, N = 949), and ‘work environment and resources’ (3.0%, N = 598). Conclusion: There is need for effective communication and clear responsibilities between home care patients and their relatives and health providers, about MA and its challenges in home environments. Knowledge and skills relating to safe MA are also essential. Impact: These findings about MA incidents that have occurred in patients’ homes and have been reported by home care professionals demonstrate the need for medication safety improvement in home care.
AB - Aims: To describe the characteristics of medication administration (MA) incidents reported to have occurred in patients’ own homes (reporters’ profession, incident types, contributing factors, patient consequence, and most common medications involved) and to identify the connection terms related to the most common contributing factors based on free text descriptions. Design: A retrospective study using descriptive statistical analysis and text mining. Methods: Medication administration incidents (N = 19,725) reported to have occurred in patients’ homes between 2013–2018 in one district in Finland were analysed, describing the data by the reporters’ occupation, incident type, contributing factors, and patient consequence. SAS® Text Miner was used to analyse free text descriptions of the MA incidents to understand contributing factors, using concept linking. Results: Most MA incidents were reported by practical (lower level) nurses (77.8%, N = 15,349). The most common category of harm was ‘mild harm’ (40.1%, N = 7,915) and the most common error type was omissions of drug doses (47.4%, N = 9,343). The medications most commonly described were Marevan [warfarin] (N = 2,668), insulin (N = 811), Furesis [furosemide] (N = 590), antibiotic (N = 446), and Panadol [paracetamol] (N = 416). The contributing factors most commonly reported were ‘communication and flow of information’ (25.5%, N = 5,038), ‘patient and relatives’ (22.6%, N = 4,451), ‘practices’ (9.9%, N = 1,959), ‘education and training’ (4.8%, N = 949), and ‘work environment and resources’ (3.0%, N = 598). Conclusion: There is need for effective communication and clear responsibilities between home care patients and their relatives and health providers, about MA and its challenges in home environments. Knowledge and skills relating to safe MA are also essential. Impact: These findings about MA incidents that have occurred in patients’ homes and have been reported by home care professionals demonstrate the need for medication safety improvement in home care.
KW - home care
KW - incident report
KW - medication administration
KW - nursing
KW - text mining
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85092469682&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/jan.14532
DO - 10.1111/jan.14532
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85092469682
SN - 0309-2402
VL - 76
SP - 3573
EP - 3583
JO - Journal of Advanced Nursing
JF - Journal of Advanced Nursing
IS - 12
ER -