Litcius/Paper detail

Safety-netting in the consultation

Peter J Edwards, Paul Silverston, Jane Sprackman, Damian Roland

2022BMJ22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

### What you need to know Safety-netting has become a widely used term to describe an array of activities both within the consultation and on systems levels. Within the consultation, safety-netting is considered best practice, and often an expected clinical standard, particularly in primary and emergency care.12 The term was first coined by Roger Neighbour in 1987 as an in-consultation tool for managing clinical uncertainty.3 Safety-netting advice has since been defined as: “Information shared with a patient or their carer, designed to help them identify the need to seek further medical help if their condition fails to improve, changes, or if they have concerns about their health.”45 This article outlines the principles and evidence base (box 1) of safety-netting and offers an approach to giving effective safety-netting advice. Box 1 ### Is there an evidence base for safety-netting? A literature review in 2019 reported the most common type of safety-netting article was an expert opinion (n=25), followed by qualitative studies (n=12), with no completed randomised controlled trial (RCT).6 An updated realist review in 2022, which produced 15 recommendations to enhance the communication of safety-netting advice, included reference to two randomised trials, but neither had a primary intervention of safety-netting or referred to this term.7 However, there have been multiple RCTs of treating common infections with arms comparing patient information leaflets (which commonly contain safety-netting advice) against no leaflets. In a systematic review of such studies, six of the seven RCT leaflets included safety-netting advice (one was unclear), which demonstrated an overall trend towards … RETURN TO TEXT

Topics & Concepts

NettingMedicineIntervention (counseling)Patient safetyRandomized controlled trialFamily medicineHealth careNursingBusinessSurgeryFinanceEconomicsEconomic growthClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic SkillsEmergency and Acute Care StudiesPatient-Provider Communication in Healthcare