Usability and Accessibility of Publicly Available Patient Safety Databases. - 2022

Available online through MWHC library: March 2005 - present

CONCLUSIONS: Patient safety databases should be improved to support patient safety analyst use by, at a minimum, allowing for data to be sorted/compared/filtered, providing data visualization, and enabling free-text search. Databases should also enable data scientist use by, at a minimum, providing an application programing interface, batch downloading, and a data dictionary. Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved. METHODS: An Internet search was conducted to identify publicly available patient safety databases that contained patient safety reports. Each database was analyzed to identify features that enable patient safety analyst and data scientist use of these databases. OBJECTIVES: The aims of the study were to identify publicly available patient safety report databases and to determine whether these databases support safety analyst and data scientist use to identify patterns and trends. RESULTS: Seven databases (6 hosted by federal agencies, 1 hosted by a nonprofit organization) containing more than 28.3 million safety reports were identified. Some, but not all, databases contained features to support patient safety analyst use: 57.1% provided the ability to sort/compare/filter data, 42.9% provided data visualization, and 85.7% enabled free-text search. None of the databases provided regular updates or monitoring and only one database suggested solutions to patient safety reports. Analysis of features to support data scientist use showed that only 42.9% provided an application programing interface, most (85.7%) provided batch downloading, all provided documentation about the database, and 71.4% provided a data dictionary. All databases provided open access. Only 28.6% provided a data diagram.


English

1549-8417

01209203-990000000-00012 [pii] 10.1097/PTS.0000000000001018 [doi]


IN PROCESS -- NOT YET INDEXED


MedStar Institute for Innovation


MedStar Institute for Quality and Safety
National Center for Human Factors in Healthcare


Journal Article