Litcius/Paper detail

Barriers to Incident Reporting among Nurses: A Qualitative Systematic Review

Moataz Mohamed Maamoun Hamed, Stathis Konstantinidis

2021Western Journal of Nursing Research79 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Incident reporting in health care prevents error recurrence, ultimately improving patient safety. A qualitative systematic review was conducted, aiming to identify barriers to incident reporting among nurses. Joanna Briggs Institute methodology for qualitative systematic reviews was followed, with data extracted using JBI QARI tools, and selected studies assessed for methodological quality using Critical Appraisal Skills Program (CASP). A meta-aggregation synthesis was carried out, and confidence in findings was assessed using GRADE ConQual. A total of 921 records were identified, but only five studies were included. The overall methodological quality of these studies was good and GRADE ConQual assessment score was "moderate." Fear of negative consequences was the most cited barrier to nursing incident reporting. Barriers also included inadequate incident reporting systems and lack of interdisciplinary and interdepartmental cooperation. Lack of nurses' necessary training made it more difficult to understand the importance of incident reporting and the definition of error. Lack of effective feedback and motivation and a pervasive blame culture were also identified.

Topics & Concepts

Critical appraisalIncident reportBlameSystematic reviewQualitative researchCritical Incident TechniquePatient safetyMedicineMEDLINENursingQualitative propertyPsychologyHealth careMedical educationAlternative medicinePsychiatryComputer scienceComputer securityPolitical scienceEconomicsLawPathologyBusinessMachine learningSocial scienceSociologyMarketingEconomic growthPatient Safety and Medication ErrorsMedical Malpractice and Liability IssuesClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills