A list grounded in data and expert opinion.
Each year, ECRI Institute creates a list of top 10 patient safety concerns in order “to support organizations in their efforts to proactively identify and respond to threats to patient safety.”
The list isn’t generated out of thin air. The ECRI Institute relies both on data regarding events and concerns and on expert judgment. Since 2009, ECRI and partner patient safety organizations “have received more than 2.8 million event reports.”
2019 Top 10 Patient Safety Concerns
- Diagnostic Stewardship and Test Result Management Using EHRs
- Antimicrobial Stewardship in Physician Practices and Aging Services
- Burnout and Its Impact on Patient Safety
- Patient Safety Concerns Involving Mobile Health
- Reducing Discomfort with Behavioral Health
- Detecting Changes in a Patient’s Condition
- Developing and Maintaining Skills
- Early Recognition of Sepsis across the Continuum
- Infections from Peripherally Inserted IV Lines
- Standardizing Safety Efforts across Large Health System
New risks, existing concerns that are changing, persistent issues.
The full executive report, which is available for download at the ECRI Institute website, details the rationale for each safety concern as well as at least one practical recommendation for each item on the list.
Interestingly, the report is at pains to make clear that this list goes beyond simple “tabulation” to a deeper level of analysis:
The list does not necessarily represent the issues that occur most frequently or are most severe. Most organizations already know what their high-frequency, high-severity challenges are. Rather, this list identifies concerns that might be high priorities for other reasons, such as new risks, existing concerns that are changing because of new technology or care delivery models, and persistent issues that need focused attention or pose new opportunities for intervention.
Nurses, do you agree with this list, or have something you’d like to add?
Comments are moderated before approval, but always welcome.