Emergency Patients Clinical Trial
Official title:
Cross Checking to Reduce Adverse Events Resulting From Medical Errors in the Emergency Department
Multicenter cluster randomized study to evaluate the reduction of the rate of severe medical errors with implementation of systematic cross checkings between emergency physician.
The CHARMED study is a prospective, multicenter, cluster-randomized cross-over study in six
EDs in France. Centers will be randomly assigned to use routine management or systematic
cross checking in the first period, and will use the alternative strategy in the second
period (Fig 1). Patients will be recruited in six centers in France
In both periods, from 9am to 5pm, a CRT will be present in the ED to collect variables on
providers and patients.
In the control period, usual care and routine management will be provided. In the
intervention group, systematic cross-checking will be implemented three times a day from
8:30am to 6:00pm between emergency physicians. The CRT will seek emergency physicians (EP)
by pairs for crosschecking. Senior physicians will use peer crosschecking (i.e. crosschecker
will also be an emergency senior physician). The CRT will assist the pairing. Each EP will
prepare to present all his or her current patients. Patient presentation will be will be
protocolised (see below), although usual presentation will be sought as this is the
presentation method already in place for handover. The crosschecking will occur in the
presence of the CRT and in the ED, in any medical office staff room, or cubicle available.
Each EP will then have to present the patients he is actually taking care of, with brief
description of the case. After a case has been presented by the EP, the comments and advice
of the crosschecker will be sought.
In accordance to national and international recommendations 1,2,15, the following
definitions will be used:
Medical Error: Failure of a planned action to be completed as intended, or the use of a
wrong plan to achieve an aim. The severity of an error will be classified using the National
Coordinating Council on Medical Error and Reporting (NCCMERP) from A to I 16, as shown in
table 2.
Adverse event (AE): An injury that might have resulted from medical care (or lack thereof).
Near Miss: A medical error that has the potential to cause an adverse event, but did not
either by chance or after an intervention. A near miss is an error of severity B, C or D.
Preventable AE: An AE associated with an error. A preventable AE is a medical error of
severity E, F, G, H or I.
Severe Medical Error (SME): preventable AE or a near miss. The primary objective is to
assess whether the implementation of Systematic Cross Serious unexplained guideline
violation (local or national), even in the absence of any documented injury, will be
considered an AE. Checking in the ED will reduce the rate of severe medical errors. The
primary endpoint is the rate of SME in the seven days following ED visits. As previously
described, the subsequent adverse events might not clearly appear in the ED settings, hence
is considered as a SME 8. Hospital or ED re-attendance within the next 7 days will be also
considered as an adverse event.
Secondary endpoints include the followings:
- Rate of AE and preventable AE
- Rate of Near Miss
- Severity of SME
- Factors associated to SME:
- Related to patient (age, chief complaint, comorbidities, triage level)
- Related to physician (grade, experience, number of physician involved, handoff)
- Related to the ED visit (Time of visit, daily occupancy, crowding, waiting time,
length of stay, total number of emergency physicians)
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