Critical success factors for implementation of an incident learning system in radiation oncology department
Nenhuma Miniatura disponível
Citações na Scopus
Tipo de produção
Artigo
Data
2020-10-03
Autores
RADICCHI, LUCAS AUGUSTO
TOLEDO, J. C.
ALLIPRANDINI, D. H.
TOLEDO, J. C.
ALLIPRANDINI, D. H.
Orientador
Periódico
REPORTS OF PRACTICAL ONCOLOGY AND RADIOTHERAPY
Título da Revista
ISSN da Revista
Título de Volume
Citação
RADICCHI, LUCAS AUGUSTO; TOLEDO, J. C.; ALLIPRANDINI, D. H.;ALLIPRANDINI, DARIO HENRIQUE;ALIPRANDINI, DARIO HENRIQUE;ALIPRANDINI, D. H.;ALLIPRANDINI, DÁRIO HENRIQUE;ALLIPRANDINI, DARIO. Critical success factors for implementation of an incident learning system in radiation oncology department. REPORTS OF PRACTICAL ONCOLOGY AND RADIOTHERAPY, v. 25, n. 6, p. 994-1000, 2020.
Texto completo (DOI)
Palavras-chave
Resumo
Aim
The aim of this study was to analyze critical success factors (CSFs) for implementation of an incident learning system (ILS) in a radiation oncology department (ROD) and evaluate the perception of the staff members along this process.
Background
Implementing an ILS is a way to leverage learning from incidents and is a tool for improving patient safety, consisting of a cycle of reporting and analyzing events as well as taking preventive actions. ILS implementation is challenging, requiring specific resources and cultural changes.
Materials and methods
An ILS was designed and implemented based on the CSF identified in the literature review. Before starting the ILS implementation, a structured survey was applied to assess dimensions of patient safety culture. After the period of implementation (7 months), the survey was applied again and compared with the initial assessment, and interviews were performed with staff members to evaluate the overall satisfaction with ILS and CSFs.
Results
Statistically significant improvements were observed in 5 dimensions (12 totals) of the safety culture survey, considering time points before and after the ILS implementation. According to interviewees, “Facilitating committee”, “Efficient data collection”, “Focus on improvement”, “Just culture” and “Feedback to users” were the most relevant CSFs.
Conclusions
The ILS designed and implemented at ROD was perceived as an important tool to support quality and safety initiatives, promoting the improvement in safety culture. The ILS implementation critical success factors were identified and have shown good agreement between the results of the literature and the users' practical perception.