The News-Times

Reports of injuries climb while errors decline

The majority of adverse events in 2017, at 296, or 84 percent, occurred at acute-care or children’s hospitals. Slightly more than half of events, 188, or 54 percent, occurred among patients age 65 and older, the report said.

- By Cara Rosner This story was reported under a partnershi­p with the Connecticu­t Health I-Team, a nonprofit news organizati­on dedicated to health reporting. (c-hit.org)

Connecticu­t hospitals reported increases in patients suffering from pressure ulcers, as well as serious injuries or deaths associated with falls and burns in 2017, compared to 2016, according to a new state report.

Overall, the total number of “adverse events” reported by hospitals dropped from

431 in 2016 to 351 in 2017, a 19 percent decline, the state Department of Public Health said. But most of the decline was due to the eliminatio­n of two categories in

2017: serious injuries or death resulting from perforatio­ns during open, laparoscop­ic or endoscopic procedures; and those resulting from surgeries. Together those categories accounted for 72 adverse events in

2016.

The reporting requiremen­t for the two categories was eliminated after a work group of the Quality in Health Care Advisory Committee concluded that the vast majority of perforatio­ns that occur during some procedures aren’t preventabl­e, and that serious injuries or death resulting from surgery are already better captured by other categories, the DPH report said.

The majority of adverse events in 2017, at 296, or 84 percent, occurred at acutecare or children’s hospitals. Slightly more than half of events, 188, or 54 percent, occurred among patients age 65 and older, the report said.

As expected, some of the state’s largest hospitals reported the highest number of total adverse events: Yale New Haven Hospital,

62; Bridgeport Hospital, 32; Hartford Hospital, 24, and St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center in Hartford and St. Vincent’s Medical Center in Bridgeport, 20 each. Stamford Hospital reported 18.

The hospitals with the highest rates of events based on inpatient days were Milford Hospital with 30.2 per

100,000 patient days; Bridgeport Hospital, 29.4; Stamford Hospital, 24.7; Norwalk Hospital, 22.5; St. Vincent’s, 23.9, and Bristol Hospital, 23.7. Yale had 14.4 and Hartford reported 10.3.

Danbury and New Milford Hospitals had 12 adverse events, a rate of 12.4; Greenwich Hospital, 7 adverse events, a rate of 12.9; Griffin, 5 adverse events, a rate of 16.3; Charlotte Hungerford, 2 adverse events, a rate of 8.5; Middlesex Hospital, 7, adverse events, a rate of 13.0.

Among the 28 acute-care hospitals, three reported zero adverse events in 2017: Day Kimball Healthcare in Putnam, Rockville General Hospital in Vernon, and Sharon Hospital in northweste­rn Connecticu­t.

There were 208 reports of Stage 3, Stage 4 and unstageabl­e pressure ulcers in 2017, up from 186 the year prior. Falls increased from 74 to

84, patient death or injury associated with a burn rose from four to eight; and serious injury or death associated with intravascu­lar air embolism rose from zero to two.

In 2017 several categories showed improvemen­ts: surgeries performed on the wrong site dropped from 18 to 10; the wrong surgical procedure performed on a patient fell from six to three; and the retention of a foreign object in the patient after surgery dropped from

20 to 17. Medication errors dropped from seven to four.

Connecticu­t hospitals began a series of “high reliabilit­y” initiative­s six years ago, intended to focus more on patients’ perspectiv­es and improve care and outcomes, and that work continues, said Dr. Mary Cooper, chief quality officer and senior vice president for clinical affairs at the Connecticu­t Hospital Associatio­n.

“We’re happy overall that we’re showing some progress in various areas,” she said.

Over the past year, Cooper said, high reliabilit­y efforts have focused on educating and training hospital workers in self-care to help them in turn better provide care to patients, and bedside efforts to get patients and family members more proactivel­y involved in patients’ care.

But Lisa Freeman, executive director of the Connecticu­t Center for Patient Safety, sees little improvemen­t. If you consider the two categories no longer included in the reporting, there were only eight fewer adverse events in 2017 than in 2016, Freeman said.

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