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Developing the ‘GRIPES’ tool for junior doctors to report concerns: a pilot study.

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posted on 2016-12-01, 11:24 authored by S. Carr, T. Mukherjee, A. Montgomery, M. Durbridge, C. Tarrant
Background Junior doctors often have concerns about quality and safety but show low levels of engagement with incident reporting systems. We aimed to develop and pilot a web-based reporting tool for junior doctors to proactively report concerns about quality and safety of care, and optimise it for future use. Methods We developed the gripes tool with input from junior doctors and piloted it at a large UK teaching hospital trust. We evaluated the tool through an analysis of concerns reported over a 3-month pilot period, and through interviews with five stakeholders and two focus groups with medical students and junior doctors about their views of the tool. Results Junior doctors reported 111 concerns during piloting, including a number of problems previously unknown to the trust. Junior doctors felt the tool was easy to use and encouraged them to report. Barriers to engagement included lack of motivation of junior doctors to report concerns, and fear of repercussions. Ensuring transparency about who would see reported concerns, and providing feedback across whole cohorts of junior doctors about concerns raised and how these had been addressed to improve patient safety at the trust, were seen having the potential to mitigate against these barriers. Sustainability of the tool was seen as requiring a revised model of staffing to share the load for responding to concerns and ongoing efforts to integrate the tool and data with other local systems for gathering intelligence about risks and incidents. Following piloting the trust committed to continuing to operate the gripes tool on an ongoing basis. Conclusions The gripes tool has the potential to enable trusts to proactively monitor and address risks to patient safety, but sustainability is likely to be dependent on organisational commitment to staffing the system and perceptions of added value over the longer term.

Funding

The evaluation was supported by funding from Mary Dixon-Woods’ Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator Award (WT097899).

History

Citation

Pilot & Feasibility Studies 2016 2:60

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Pilot & Feasibility Studies 2016 2:60

Publisher

BioMed Central

eissn

2055-5784

Acceptance date

2016-09-16

Available date

2016-12-01

Publisher version

https://pilotfeasibilitystudies.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s40814-016-0100-0

Notes

Additional file 1: TIDieR checklist for the gripes intervention. (DOCX 47 kb) https://static-content.springer.com/esm/art:10.1186/s40814-016-0100-0/MediaObjects/40814_2016_100_MOESM1_ESM.docx

Language

en

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