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Incident reporting lies at the heart of many initiatives to improve patient safety. The UK National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA)1 has recently launched a national reporting and learning system following substantial piloting and testing across the National Health Service (NHS). In the USA the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) made incident reporting the centrepiece of its first patient safety funding programme, investing $25 million in the first year into research in incident reporting systems.2 The Australian incident monitoring system has amassed a massive database of reports over 15 years.3 New risk management and patient safety programmes-whether local or national-rely on incident reporting to provide data on the nature of safety problems and to provide indications of the causes of those problems and the likely solutions.

Original publication

DOI

10.1136/qhc.13.4.242

Type

Journal article

Journal

Qual Saf Health Care

Publication Date

08/2004

Volume

13

Pages

242 - 243

Keywords

Australia, Data Collection, Humans, Learning, Medical Errors, National Health Programs, Quality Assurance, Health Care, Quality Indicators, Health Care, Risk Management, Safety Management, Systems Analysis