Using HFACS-Healthcare to Identify Systematic Vulnerabilities During Surgery

Tara N. Cohen, Sarah E. Francis, Scott A. Shappell, Douglas A. Wiegmann, Bruce L. Gewertz

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The Human Factors Analysis and Classification System for Healthcare (HFACS-Healthcare) was used to classify surgical near miss events reported via a hospital’s event reporting system over the course of 1 year. Two trained analysts identified causal factors within each event narrative and subsequently categorized the events using HFACS-Healthcare. Of 910 original events, 592 could be analyzed further using HFACS-Healthcare, resulting in the identification of 726 causal factors. Most issues (n = 436, 60.00%) involved preconditions for unsafe acts, followed by unsafe acts (n = 257, 35.39%), organizational influences (n = 27, 3.72%), and supervisory factors (n = 6, 0.82%). These findings go beyond the traditional methods of trending incident data that typically focus on documenting the frequency of their occurrence. Analyzing near misses based on their underlying contributing human factors affords a greater opportunity to develop process improvements to reduce reoccurrence and better provide patient safety approaches.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalAmerican Journal of Medical Quality
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 21 2018

Keywords

  • human factors
  • surgery
  • Human Factors Analysis and Classification System-Healthcare (HFACS-Healthcare)
  • near-miss events

Disciplines

  • Surgery

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