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RESEARCH

Better knowledge for safer care

IBEAS: a pioneer study on patient safety in


Latin America

Towards safer hospital care


WHO/IER/PSP/2010.3

© World Health Organization 2011

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IBEAS: a pioneer study on patient safety
in Latin America

Towards safer hospital care

RESEARCH
Better knowledge for safer care
TABLE OF CONTENTS

Foreword 1

Introduction 2

The IBEAS study in Latin America 4

Main findings of the IBEAS study 5

What were the consequences? 7


Conclusions and recommendations 8

How was the IBEAS study conducted? 9

Acknowledgments 10
FOREWORD

Every year, tens of millions of patients worldwide suffer injury or die as a result of
unsafe health care. In various parts of the world, a concerted effort is being made to
identify the main health-care risks, pinpoint the causes, and develop and implement
effective solutions to these problems. Understanding the situation is the first step
towards preventing risks and reducing the burden of disease associated with health-
care incidents. The IBEAS study is the first large-scale study to be carried out in Latin
America, to assess the extent of the issues that can occur in hospitals due to unsafe
care. This important effort recognizes the complexity of the sector and highlights the
commitment of its leaders to the health and well-being of their patients.

The hospitals that decided, in a coordinated manner, to collaborate in the


IBEAS study have demonstrated their firm commitment to safer care and to the
improvement of their health systems. The task undertaken in this project has been
wide-ranging and significant. A collaborative model has been established in which
58 centres and research teams from Argentina, Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico
and Peru participated, under the leadership of their respective Ministries of Health,
thereby enhancing the critical mass of professionals trained in patient safety, which is
enormously important for the future of the sector in Latin America.

The technical guidance provided by the principal investigators, supported by the


Quality Agency of the Spanish Ministry of Health, Social Policy and Equity, has
helped to create synergies on both sides of the Atlantic in the area of patient safety,
based on previous experiences in Spain. The collaboration fostered by the Pan
American Health Organization and the World Health Organization offers a model for
new international projects. The political, social and institutional momentum generated
around the IBEAS study is significant and, we would like to think, unstoppable.

This document contains the main findings of the IBEAS study. It also presents some
of the risks associated with harm, the prevention of which will contribute to improving
patient safety. Its lessons and key messages are applicable beyond the borders of
the participating countries and are therefore a model and a guide for other parts of
the world.

Congratulations to all those who have contributed to this study.

Dr David Bates
External Programme Lead for Research, WHO Patient Safety

1
INTRODUCTION

Every year, tens of millions


of patients throughout
the world suffer injuries or
die as a result of unsafe
medical care.

Despite the intention of health services to prevent or cure diseases, all too often
health care itself causes harm to its users. Certain infections, injuries due to medical
procedures, amputations of the wrong organ or limb, poisoning or even death resulting
from erroneous dosages, are all classified as hospital-related harmful incidents or
adverse events.

Such incidents lead to suffering, disability and often devastate lives, not to mention the
considerable economic resources that are expended on protracted hospital stays and
unnecessary care, and the loss of profit and credibility suffered by the health system
itself. Mexico

Costa Rica
Much of the current thinking about ways to avoid such incidents and improve patient
Colombia
safety comes from the most developed countries. We need to expand our horizons
to include the situation in countries with emerging economies as a prerequisite for Peru
proposing solutions.

The Latin American Study of Adverse Events (IBEAS) is the first study on hospital-
related harmful incidents to be carried out on a large scale in Latin America. The lack Argentina
of previous studies in the Latin American context poses a difficult challenge, but at
the same time highlights the importance of the IBEAS study as a first essential step
towards improving patient safety.

2
Some reasons to think about patient safety
• It is estimated that 1 in 10 inpatients will experience a harmful incident during their stay in hospital. This statistic has
been recorded in medium- and high-income countries, but no analogous statistic currently exists for countries with emerging
economies, although it is thought that the extent of the problem in these countries could be even greater.

• According to estimates, every day 1.4 million people worldwide suffer from an infection acquired in a health-care setting.

• In some countries, 1 in 10 hospital admissions is due to adverse reactions to medication.

•  ven more serious, around half of these harmful incidents could have been avoided if existing health-care standards had
E
been applied. Sometimes small gestures, such as hand washing or systematically using a checklist, can help save many
lives.

• Harmful incidents can be devastating for the patients affected: in addition to the physical and mental harm, injuries can
result in temporary or permanent inability to work, and in extreme cases in death.

• In some countries, it has been calculated that the annual economic cost of harmful incidents runs into several billion US
dollars; as well as causing patients to take time off work, the number of additional days spent in hospital is increased and
significantly more resources are expended (more medication, more surgical interventions, more diagnostic tests and more
treatment in general).

•  or all the above reasons, the lack of patient safety is now considered a global public health issue and efforts should
F
therefore focus on dealing with the problem.

•  very person and institution directly or indirectly responsible for ensuring patient safety (not just health workers, but also
E
managers and policy-makers) are key to establishing a culture of safety.

• Properly informed patients can also help to improve their own safety.

The lack of safety in


health care is currently
thought of as a
global public health
problem.

3
The IBEAS study in Latin America

The main objective of the IBEAS study was to


assess the patient safety situation in a number of
Latin American hospitals.

Accordingly, the objectives of the study were:


• To gain insights into the magnitude of the problem;

• To assess the frequency, severity, timing and probable cause of the


identified harmful incidents;

To assess how such incidents could have been avoided, and identify

their determinants.

Although Latin American countries have certain common features, they are also characterized by an important socio-cultural
diversity. To get a better idea of the situation, therefore, large-scale studies needed to be carried out in a number of countries.
Research was therefore carried out in 58 hospitals (11 379 patients) in the following five countries: Argentina, Colombia, Costa
Rica, Mexico and Peru. These five countries had the courage to take part in the study knowing that they would expose the
possible failings of their hospitals to general scrutiny.

But the most important benefit for the participating hospitals was that the experience enabled them to pioneer a culture of patient
safety. As we were able to confirm, this culture came into being from the outset of the study and occurred mainly in the following
two ways:

1. The study itself increased awareness of patient safety among the health professionals who participated in the study;

2. The mere fact of conducting research made it possible to pinpoint areas for improvement, thereby putting these hospitals on
track for improved safety.

4
Main findings of the IBEAS study

What is the issue? What is the extent of the problem?


• On any given day, 10% of the patients admitted to the hospitals in the study had experienced some kind of harm due to
health care. This was the finding of the prevalence study, (see “How was the IBEAS study conducted?”);
• This risk doubled when considering the entire duration of the patient’s hospital stay: 20% of inpatients experienced at
least one harmful incident during their hospital stay. This was the finding of the incidence study, (see “How was the IBEAS
study conducted?”).

On the day of the study,


1 in 10 inpatients
were suffering from
or were undergoing
treatment for a
hospital-related harmful
incident.

5
What factors influenced the frequency of harmful incidents?
• The unit to which the patient was admitted (harmful incidents occurred most frequently in intensive care and surgical units, least
frequently in clinical services);
• Duration of hospitalization (risk increased with each additional day);
• Co-occurrence of illnesses (the greater the number of illnesses or conditions, the greater the risk of a harmful incident);
• The presence of risk factors such as catheterization and other “invasive” procedures.

Which were the 10 most frequent types of harm associated with harmful incidents?

1. Pneumonia 7. Health impacts due to delayed diagnosis or


misdiagnosis
2. Surgical wound infection
8. Lesion of an organ due to a medical intervention
3. Pressure ulcers (owing to immobility) or procedure

4. Sepsis and septic shock 9. Haemorrhage or haematoma due to a medical


intervention or procedure
5. Injury requiring treatment in the intensive care unit
10. Bacterial infection of the blood due to a device
6. Phlebitis such as a catheter.

Figure 1.

40

35

30

25
Percentage

20

15

10

0
Infection Surgical Medical Medication Diagnosis Other
procedure care

Cause of harm

6
What were the consequences?

More than half of


harmful incidents
could have been
avoided.

Figure 2. Physical consequences of incidents


Effects on the patient’s physical condition

The patient’s physical condition:

Of every 100 patients who experienced a harmful incident:


• 7 died (2 as a direct result of the event and 5 as a result of
the event in combination with other conditions)
• 17 were left totally disabled
• 12 were left severely disabled and
• 64 were mildly disabled or suffered no disability.
Death
Total disability
Severe disability
Mild or no disability

During additional days spent in hospital:

• Of every 100 patients who experienced harmful incidents, 63 had to extend their hospital stay, 18 had to be readmitted and only
19 did not need to spend additional days in hospital.
• On average, harmful incidents extended the duration of hospitalization by more than 16 days per patient (with variations of
between 13 and 19 days depending on the country).

Could the harmful incidents have been avoided?


• Of every 10 incidents associated with hospital-related harmful incidents, nearly six could have been avoided. The
proportion of avoidable harmful incidents was higher in obstetric and other medical services.

7
Conclusions and recommendations

What do we now know?


• The IBEAS study has enabled us, for the first time, to grasp the problem of patient safety and gain some insights into hospital-
related harmful incidents in certain hospitals in Latin America;
• We now know that we are facing a very serious public health problem in health systems.

What’s next? What can we do?


In light of the seriousness of this problem, our objective must be to improve patient safety. To do this, we need to design and
implement locally effective solutions to prevent harm. In order to design such solutions, we must gain a deeper understanding of
the situation. In other words, we need to conduct research in order to better understand the problem, so that we can take
action to improve patient safety.

Specifically, we need to:


1. Draw attention to the issue of unsafe health care and make public health stakeholders aware of the need to improve patient
safety;
2. Design specific strategies to improve safety on the basis of the findings of the IBEAS study. Our findings have highlighted the
areas where problems appear to be most frequent and where improvements could be made;
3. Pay special attention to the most vulnerable patients, such as those with more than one condition, infants aged 0-12 months and
the elderly aged over 65;
4. Recommend health policies that promote patient safety;
5. Encourage a culture of patient safety among health professionals and managers;
6. Conduct more research to understand the situation and identify solutions to improve patient safety. Participation in this type of
study automatically enhances the culture of safety (not only among researchers but also among other professionals).

Research is needed to
understand the problem
and to take action
towards improving
patient safety.

88
How was the IBEAS study conducted?

The IBEAS study had two parts, a prevalence study and a retrospective incidence study.

• The prevalence study involved determining how many patients admitted to the participating hospitals experienced harmful
incidents attributable to health care on a given day (Day 0).
• The incidence study was conducted using a sample of patients with the aim of confirming whether the prevalence study could
replace the conventional incidence study used to date. Specifically, the study involved reviewing the case notes of a random
sample of 10% of patients hospitalized on Day 0 in the participating hospitals. Case notes were scanned to ascertain whether, at
some point during their hospitalization (or previously), inpatients had experienced a harmful incident, regardless of whether the
consequences of the incident were still present on Day 0. Patients continued to be monitored until discharge.

Incidence studies require


greater human and
economic effort than
prevalence studies.

In both studies, researchers used two tools to detect harmful incidents, namely a Screening Guide and a Modular
Questionnaire to identify harmful incidents using the medical record review methodology.

• First, the screening guide was applied to the patients in the study. This served as an alert and tracking system for possible
incidents.
• If a patient screened positive for one or more of the 19 alert criteria in the screening guide, the case was studied using the
case history. An in-depth study of case histories enabled researchers to conclude whether a patient did in fact present with the
consequences of a harmful incident (true positive) and if so, to classify the type of event, its severity, any associated factors,
and whether or not the incident could have been avoided, etc.

As was to be expected, the incidence study generally detected proportionally more incidents than the prevalence study,
since it examined the entire duration of hospitalization and could detect more deaths and short-term lesions. However, incidence
studies are more laborious and costly than prevalence studies.

9
Basic information on the samples studied

• The study was carried out between 2007 and 2009


• In five countries: Argentina, Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico and Peru
• In 58 hospitals
• 11 379 patients were studied in the prevalence study (the total number of patients admitted on the day of the study, Day 0)
• 1 088 patients were studied in the incidence study (random sample of 10% of patients admitted on the day of the prevalence
study, Day 0).

Acknowledgments
The Latin American Study of Adverse
Events (IBEAS) was carried out thanks
to the collaborative effort of the
governments of the five Latin American
countries that participated, Argentina,
Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico and Peru,
and the Ministry of Health, Social Policy
and Equity of Spain, which co-funded
the study. Professors Jesús Aranaz and
Carlos Aibar of the Miguel Hernández
University and the University of Zaragoza
led the technical teams that carried out
the study. Doctors Analía Amarilla, Raúl
Francisco Restrepo, Orlando Urroz,
Odet Sarabia, Fresia Cárdenas and José
Luis Corcuera each coordinated the
respective national teams participating
in IBEAS. Approximately 1 000 people
were trained in technical aspects and
participated in their respective hospitals
and coordination groups at the local
and national level by providing the data
necessary for the study. Yolanda Agra
and Enrique Terol from the Spanish
Ministry of Health, Jonás Gonseth from
the Pan American Health Organization
(and in collaboration with PAHO country
offices) and Itziar Larizgoitia from the
World Health Organization led and
coordinated the study at the international
level. This document was drafted by
Gemma Revuelta from the Science
Communication Observatory at Pompeu
Fabra University, Barcelona, Spain.

10
RESEARCH
Better knowledge for safer care

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