Moving Toward a Safer Health Care Facility: Improving Patient Identification at a Public Hospital in Saudi Arabia

Patient misidentification errors continue to represent a significant risk to patients, health care staff, and hospitals. The study's purpose was to present a successful quality improvement project implemented in a public hospital in Saudi Arabia. The project focused on increasing staff's c...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inQuality management in health care Vol. 32; no. 2; p. 117
Main Authors AlYaqoub, Fatemah, AlMubarak, Sama'a H
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.04.2023
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Summary:Patient misidentification errors continue to represent a significant risk to patients, health care staff, and hospitals. The study's purpose was to present a successful quality improvement project implemented in a public hospital in Saudi Arabia. The project focused on increasing staff's compliance with and awareness of the hospital's patient identification policy to thus reducing the number of patient misidentification-related incidents. Through a quality improvement project, we employed FOCUS PDSA to address the issue of patient misidentification at outpatient departments. A total of 640 staff members participated in the educational program including physicians, nurses, receptionists, radiologists, physiotherapists, and laboratory staff. Collected data included measures of compliance and awareness levels as well as patient misidentification incidents, before and after the project. Statistical analysis was conducted to measure significant differences in the study indicators before and after the project. Results from the post-project assessment revealed that the project was successful in achieving its objectives. The overall compliance rate and awareness level increased from 59% to 78% and from 75% to 90%, respectively. Improvement in the levels of compliance and awareness was statistically significant. The average number of patient misidentification errors also reduced after the project's implementation with an average of 3 errors per month. The mean difference of patient misidentification errors before and after the project was significant ( P < .01). This project demonstrated how quality improvement projects can be used to address a critical issue such as patient misidentification. The project furthers efforts made by national and international agencies to improve patient safety. It also highlights the importance of continuous education and training to ensure compliance with patient identification policies that ultimately contributes to a safer hospital environment.
ISSN:1550-5154
DOI:10.1097/QMH.0000000000000368