20 February 2008
Auckland District Health Board Media Statement
ADHB backs national work on adverse events
The ADHB welcomes any work to decrease adverse events in
our hospitals nationally. ADHB has taken significant
strides in improving quality systems including online
risk reporting and clinical effectiveness programmes.
“While we have already embarked on a substantial amount
of work in this area, there is no room for complacency.
We support the work of the Quality Improvement Committee
announced today toward improving systems and minimising
the risk to patients,” says David Sage, Chief Medical
Officer, ADHB.
“Any preventable error at ADHB is unacceptable and
regrettable. We are committed to improving patient
safety and the systems that minimise the risk to
patients. We operate under significant pressure and
there are multiple systems and processes in place to
minimise the risk to patients – sometimes despite
everyone’s best efforts, something goes wrong.”
Dr Sage says when something goes wrong – or harm is
prevented at the last minute – the hospital has an
obligation to patients and their families to do
everything it can to investigate what happened, fix it
and try to make sure that it does not re-occur.
“Moreover, we have a responsibility of open disclosure
to patients and their families so they know exactly what
happened and what we have done as a result of any
investigation,” he says.
But he cautions on the need to balance the requirement
for public accountability with the privacy of patients,
families and whanau, and of health professionals.
“We have to continue to encourage our staff to report
incidents to enable us to identify preventable errors so
we can make changes to ensure these errors do not happen
again.”
He says there are large differences in classification
between hospitals so it is not possible to make any
comparison based on the number of incidents reported by
different hospitals.
“As the largest hospital we tend to have bigger numbers
simply because we treat more patients and deal with more
complex cases. And the number of incidents reported
continues to increase as our reporting systems continue
to increase. This is a good thing, as it’s a sign of a
healthy reporting culture,” says Dr Sage.
Along with all other DHBs, ADHB has released details of
recent reported serious and sentinel events. These can
all be found at
www.qic.health.govt.nz
-Ends-
Sneha Paul, ADHB Communications Manager
Tel. 021 804 122
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