• Anaesthesia · Apr 2008

    Safety in anaesthesia: a study of 12,606 reported incidents from the UK National Reporting and Learning System.

    • K Catchpole, M D D Bell, and S Johnson.
    • Nuffield Department of Surgery, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK. ken.catchpole@nds.ox.ac.uk
    • Anaesthesia. 2008 Apr 1;63(4):340-6.

    AbstractThe incident reporting database at the National Patient Safety Agency was interrogated on the nature, frequency and severity of incidents related to anaesthesia. Of 12,606 reports over a 2-year period, 2842 (22.5%) resulted in little harm or a moderate degree of harm, and 269 (2.1%) resulted in severe harm or death, with procedure or treatment problems generating the highest risk. One thousand and thirty-five incidents (8%) related to pre-operative assessment, with harm occurring in 275 (26.6%), and 552 (4.4%) related to epidural anaesthesia, with harm reported in 198 (35.9%). Fifty-eight occurrences of anaesthetic awareness were also examined. This preliminary analysis is not authoritative enough to warrant widespread changes of practice, but justifies future collaborative approaches to reduce the potential for harm and improve the submission, collection and analysis of incident reports. Practitioners, departments and professional bodies should consider how the information can be used to promote patient safety and their own defensibility.

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