Volume 28, Issue 8 pp. 2007-2016
SPECIAL ISSUE PAPER

Characteristics of recovery from near misses in primary health care nursing: A Prospective descriptive study

Maria Angeles Vázquez-Sánchez RN

Corresponding Author

Maria Angeles Vázquez-Sánchez RN

PhD in Nursing

Department of Nursing, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Malaga, Malaga, Spain

Correspondence

Maria Angeles Vazquez-Sanchez, Department of Nursing, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Malaga, Spain.

Email: [email protected]

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María Jiménez-Arcos RN

María Jiménez-Arcos RN

Nursing

San Andrés-Torcal Primary Health Care Centre, Malaga, Spain

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Pilar Aguilar-Trujillo RN

Pilar Aguilar-Trujillo RN

Nursing

San Andrés-Torcal Primary Health Care Centre, Malaga, Spain

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Marcos Guardiola-Cardenas RN

Marcos Guardiola-Cardenas RN

Nursing

San Andrés-Torcal Primary Health Care Centre, Malaga, Spain

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Federico Damián-Jiménez RN

Federico Damián-Jiménez RN

Nursing

Puerta Blanca Primary Health Care Centre, Malaga, Spain

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Cristina Casals

Cristina Casals

PhD in Sport Sciences and Human Nutrition

MOVE-IT Research group and Department of Physical Education, Faculty of Education Sciences, University of Cadiz, Cadiz, Spain

Research Unit, Biomedical Research and Innovation Institute of Cadiz (INiBICA), Puerta del Mar University Hospital, University of Cadiz, Cadiz, Spain

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First published: 07 May 2020
Citations: 6

Funding information

This study was partly funded by Department of Nursing, University of Málaga, Spain.

Abstract

Aim

To describe the frequency and types of near misses and the recovery strategies employed by nurses in primary health care.

Background

Insufficient data are available on the role of nurses in near miss events and related factors in primary health care.

Method

A prospective descriptive study was carried out at one Urban Primary Health Care Centre, within the Málaga-Guadalhorce Health District (Malaga, Spain), from January to December 2018. Four of the ten nurses volunteered to take part.

Results

The nurses recovered 185 near misses, prevailing administrative or communication-related errors, followed by medication-related errors. No near misses were reported on the centre's anonymous error information platform.

Conclusions

A significant number of near misses occurred which could have been avoided with better communication among health care personnel. A striking finding is the failure to inform the health centre, which suggests that improvements in safety culture are needed.

Implications for nursing management

It is the responsibility and the duty of nursing management to be aware of the characteristics and frequency of near misses in primary health care, to implement strategies for improvement and to foster a culture in which the necessary information on actual or potential errors is supplied.

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