Skip Navigation Archive: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Archive: Agency for Healthcare Research Quality www.ahrq.gov
Archival print banner

This information is for reference purposes only. It was current when produced and may now be outdated. Archive material is no longer maintained, and some links may not work. Persons with disabilities having difficulty accessing this information should contact us at: https://info.ahrq.gov. Let us know the nature of the problem, the Web address of what you want, and your contact information.

Please go to www.ahrq.gov for current information.

Patient Safety Reporting and ICD-11 AHRQ's Common Formats

AHRQ's 2012 Annual Conference Slide Presentation

On September 10, 2012, William Munier made this presentation at the 2012 Annual Conference.

Select to access the PowerPoint® presentation (112 KB).

Slide 1

Text Description is below the image.

Patient Safety Reporting and ICD-11 AHRQ's Common Formats

William B Munier, MD, MBA, Director
Center for Quality Improvement and Patient Safety
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

AHRQ Annual Conference
10 September 2012

Slide 2

Text Description is below the image.

Agenda

  • Introduction.
  • Common Formats.
  • Relationship to ICD-11 and the Patient Safety Technical Advisory Group.
  • The Future.

Slide 3

Text Description is below the image.

The Reporting Issue

  • There are no universally-accepted definitions for reporting of patient safety events, either as:
    • A theoretical taxonomy, or
    • An operational patient safety reporting system.
  • ICD-11 can serve as a guiding taxonomy.
  • It will need to have functional value for reporting systems if it is to be used, just as ICD diagnosis codes have functional value for classifying discharge diagnoses in the U.S.; they are used for payment & other purposes.

Slide 4

Text Description is below the image.

Partnership for Patients (PfP)

  • Nationwide campaign in US to reduce harm to patients over three years: 2011-2013.
  • Goals are to reduce:
    • Preventable hospital-acquired conditions by 40%.
    • Hospital readmissions by 20%.
  • Measurement challenge that faced PfP:
    • No way to know precisely how many patient safety events have occurred or are occurring in the U.S.
    • No way to measure actual performance nationally.

Slide 5

Text Description is below the image.

PfP Measurement Challenge

  • Without measurement, there is no way to know if progress is being made.
  • Existing systems & research studies were used to:
    • Estimate incidence & determine goals.
    • Develop a plan to track performance based on measurement of representative populations & extrapolation to the entire U.S.
  • While that approach allows PfP to track progress, what is needed is a universally-accepted way to measure patient safety events—defined clinically & electronically.
  • ICD-11 & AHRQ Common Formats could both be part of the solution in the future.

Slide 6

Text Description is below the image.

Nov 2010 and Jan 2012 Office of the Inspector General (OIG) Reports on Adverse Events

  • OIG reported that 13.5% of hospitalized Medicare beneficiaries experienced serious adverse events; an additional 13.5% experienced temporary harm events.
  • Hospital staff did not report 86% of events to the hospital's internal incident reporting systems.
  • Medicare "hospital acquired conditions" & AHRQ "PSIs" rarely occurred.
  • In those states that require hospitals to report certain types of adverse events, serious underreporting occurs: only 1 in 12 events (found by OIG) were reported.

Slide 7

Text Description is below the image.

Problems Identified by OIG

  • Inconsistent identification of adverse events:
    • Variation within hospitals.
    • Variation across hospitals.
    • Variation among states that have external reporting requirements.
  • Confusion among front line staff regarding what events they need to report to the hospital.
  • OIG identified the Common Formats as providing a systematic method for collection of all types of adverse events and recommended that AHRQ and CMS promote more widespread use of the Formats.

Slide 8

Text Description is below the image.

AHRQ Common Formats

  • Only patient safety reporting scheme designed to meet three goals:
    • Provide information on harms from all causes.
    • Support local quality/safety improvement.
    • Allow the end user—to collect information once & supply it to whoever needs it (harmonization).
  • Developed through consensus among government health experts/agencies; feedback from the private sector; & vetting through a National Quality Forum (NQF) expert panel.

Slide 9

Text Description is below the image.

Modular Focus Hospital Version 1.2

  • Blood & Blood Products.
  • Device & Medical or Surgical Supply, Including HIT.
  • Fall.
  • Healthcare-Associated Infection.
  • Medication & Other Substances.
  • Perinatal.
  • Pressure Ulcer.
  • Surgery & Anesthesia.
  • Venous thromboembolism.
  • All others via generic forms .

Slide 10

Text Description is below the image.

Harmonization Issues

  • Current Medicare HACs & PSIs—administrative data.
  • Partnership for Patients HACs.
  • CDC's NHSN.
  • FDA's MedSun.
  • NQF Serious Reportable Events (SREs).
  • State reporting system requirements.
  • Event reporting vs. surveillance.
  • EHRs & ONC's meaningful use.

Slide 11

Text Description is below the image.

Event Reporting vs. Surveillance

  • The Common Formats are currently designed as a concurrent event-reporting system:
    • Contain information in the EHR & more.
    • Do not include denominators.
  • The Formats are being adapted to be used as a retrospective surveillance system—Safer Care:
    • Will include denominators; will generate rates.
    • Will not address near misses & unsafe conditions.

Slide 12

Text Description is below the image.

ICD–11 and the Common Formats

  • The objective of both efforts is to define patient safety events to guide patient safety reporting:
    • WHO's ICD–11 is part of the long-standing, universally-accepted classification of diagnoses; it is a natural home for a conceptually sound taxonomy for patient safety events.
    • AHRQ's Common Formats are designed for use at the local level with operational definitions that are specific enough to support software systems.
  • There should be a direct relationship between ICD-11 & the Common Formats; supporting that link, AHRQ serves on the WHO Patient Safety Technical Advisory Group.

Slide 13

Text Description is below the image.

The Future

  • Definition of patient safety events (ICD-11 & Common Formats) ultimately needs to support operational systems at three levels:
    1. Adverse event reporting (not part of medical record).
    2. Surveillance (derived from medical records).
    3. Use of electronic health records (recording of data directly into EHRs).
  • Clinical & electronic definitions must be consistent throughout all levels, & be interoperable where appropriate.

Slide 14

Text Description is below the image.

Common Formats on the Web

To view sample reports, event descriptions, user guide, and programming instructions for electronic implementation visit:
https://www.psoppc.org/web/patientsafety 

Page last reviewed December 2012
Internet Citation: Patient Safety Reporting and ICD-11 AHRQ's Common Formats: AHRQ's 2012 Annual Conference Slide Presentation. December 2012. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. https://archive.ahrq.gov/news/events/conference/2012/track_a/127_munier_et-al/munier.html

 

The information on this page is archived and provided for reference purposes only.

 

AHRQ Advancing Excellence in Health Care