
Other Useful NetLinks

Handbook Contents

Introduction

Risk management

Insurance program

Legal system

Medical records

Incident reporting

Physician-patient

Informed consent

Infectious disease

Confidentiality

Patient's rights

Risk Home Page
|

Incident Reporting
The hospital's risk management program employs a number of systems
to identify and provide notification of incidents or events that have
occurred involving patients, visitors, staff, equipment, facilities
or grounds which are likely to give rise to potential liability,
affect the quality of patient care or affect safety in the hospital.
The early identification of such occurrences allows the hospital to
immediately investigate the circumstances of the incident, and if
necessary, institute corrective action to prevent similar occurrences
in the future. One of the systems used to identify and report patient
and visitor related occurrences is the hospital's incident report
system.
Health care providers and other hospital employees are required to
report and complete a Report of Incident form (F-877) regarding any
patient or visitor who, while within hospital jurisdiction and/or
while on hospital premises, is involved in an occurrence which has
caused or has the potential to cause injury or loss or damage to
their personal property. This includes incidents where the
possibility of injury existed although no injury was actually
incurred and those incidents which are inconsistent with the routine
care of a particular patient or routine operation of the
hospital.
The following are some examples of reportable incidents:
- Error in the care of patients (e.g., errors in the
administration of medications, treatments, mismatched
transfusions, retained foreign bodies following surgery, etc.).
- Development of conditions seemingly unrelated to the disease
for which the patient was admitted (e.g., pressure sores,
pediculosis, diarrhea or impetigo in the Newborn Nursery, etc.).
- Adverse or suspected adverse reactions to a manipulative
procedure, medication or transfusion.
All health care providers should be familiar with the complete
hospital incident reporting procedures which can be found in the Yale
New Haven Hospital Administrative Policy and Procedure Manual, I-3.
The following is a brief discussion of the procedures involved in
incident reporting.
For incidents involving patients, the person completing the Report of
Incident form should be the individual who witnessed, first
discovered, or is most familiar with the incident. Each section of
the form must be completed according to the directions on the form.
The report must then be immediately presented to the reporter's
supervisor who must then investigate and recommend corrective action.
The description of the incident should be a brief narrative which
should consist of an objective description of the facts. It should
not include the writer's judgment as to the cause of the event.
Quotes should be used where applicable with unwitnessed incidents,
e.g., "Patient states..." The name of any witnesses should be
included on this report. The name of the employee directly involved
in the incident can be recorded in the witness space as well, if the
employee is not the reporter. The patient must be examined by an
appropriate physician, who should complete the appropriate section on
the form regarding his or her findings. The Report of Incident form
should be completed no later than the end of the shift during which
the incident occurred or was discovered to have occurred and must be
forwarded to the Central Nursing Office within 24 hours and the
Office of Legal Affairs within 48 hours.
All incidents involving visitors must be reported to the supervisor
in the area where the incident occurred. A visitor who has sustained
an injury while in the hospital should be escorted by a staff member
to the Emergency Service for medical attention. If the injured person
refuses medical attention, this must be noted on the Report of
Incident form.
The Report of Incident form is an administrative document, not part
of the medical record. The fact that an Report of Incident form has
been completed should not be reflected in the medical record, nor
should the report be placed in the medical record. In addition, no
copies of the Report of Incident form may be made. An objective
description of the incident should be recorded in the medical record
by both the medical and nursing staff along with any follow-up
observations, diagnostic studies and results, and/or related
treatment.
Whenever a patient or visitor incident is of an unusual or serious
nature, the Office of Legal Affairs must be called immediately.
If a medical device is involved (caused or contributed to death of,
serious injury to, or serious illness of a patient):
- report the incident to Nurse Manager/designee;
- notify the Office of Legal Affairs
- fill out a device incident report form;
- record the manufacturer, model number, serial number, and
control number of the equipment on the incident report;
- save the original packing if possible;
- when equipment is involved, impound the equipment, the
disposable product used with the equipment, and the packaging
materials from the disposable product;
- tag the equipment with a sign that states "EQUIPMENT BROKEN -
DO NOT USE";
- notify Medical Engineering that you have a piece of equipment
that has been involved in an incident and requires evaluation.
Quality Assurance Review and Analysis of Incident Reports
Report of Incident forms and other significant incidents are
reviewed on an ongoing basis by a number of departments and
committees in the hospital. This review process allows for:
- Identification and documentation of trends within service(s)
and those that cross over services that might affect policies or
procedures. This review provides another method to aid in assuring
quality patient care through promoting development of accident
prevention and loss control programs.
- Recognition and identification of hospital-wide programs to
correct identified problems.
- Assessment of conformance to required standards of practice
and care.
Each service reviews and analyzes all reported incidents on an
ongoing basis and reports trends and corrective actions taken as part
of the periodic QA/QI reports.
|