Under-Reporting of a Critical Perioperative Adverse Event: Intravenous Infiltration and Extravasation

George Tewfik Department of Anesthesiology, Rutgers- New Jersey Medical School, Newark, NJ 07103, USACorrespondence: George TewfikDepartment of Anesthesiology, Rutgers- New Jersey Medical School, 185 South Orange Ave, Newark, NJ 07103, USATel +1 973 972-5007Email glt31@njms.rutgers.eduAbstract: A cr...

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Main Author: Tewfik G
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2020-11-01
Series:Drug, Healthcare and Patient Safety
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/under-reporting-of-a-critical-perioperative-adverse-event-intravenous--peer-reviewed-article-DHPS
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spelling doaj-0e5e87c7bdd042dba87d7319b9d46dba2020-11-25T04:06:41ZengDove Medical PressDrug, Healthcare and Patient Safety1179-13652020-11-01Volume 1221721959274Under-Reporting of a Critical Perioperative Adverse Event: Intravenous Infiltration and ExtravasationTewfik GGeorge Tewfik Department of Anesthesiology, Rutgers- New Jersey Medical School, Newark, NJ 07103, USACorrespondence: George TewfikDepartment of Anesthesiology, Rutgers- New Jersey Medical School, 185 South Orange Ave, Newark, NJ 07103, USATel +1 973 972-5007Email glt31@njms.rutgers.eduAbstract: A critical step in understanding and preventing potentially disastrous complications in the perioperative period is the accurate recording of their occurrence and subsequent analysis. However, the recording of intravenous infiltration and extravasation is likely inaccurate due to several factors: rare serious complications associated with infiltration/extravasation, limitation in ICD-10 codes to describe the injury, reliance on coders to record these events in searchable databases, and limited quality measures in anesthesiology to record these events. Although current literature cites results of studies that found rates of 16% and higher for intravenous infiltration, a limited internal review at University Hospital in Newark, NJ found significantly lower rates with only 14 instances recorded in an 18-month period across the institution. This leads the author to conclude that interventions are required to better track these events including such steps as staff education and more efficient/accessible reporting systems. The accurate recording and analyzing of data related to adverse events, and in particular regarding infiltration and extravasation, require revision and reinterpretation to gain an accurate picture of their rates.Keywords: infiltration, extravasation, complication rateshttps://www.dovepress.com/under-reporting-of-a-critical-perioperative-adverse-event-intravenous--peer-reviewed-article-DHPSinfiltrationextravasationcomplication rates
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tewfik G
spellingShingle Tewfik G
Under-Reporting of a Critical Perioperative Adverse Event: Intravenous Infiltration and Extravasation
Drug, Healthcare and Patient Safety
infiltration
extravasation
complication rates
author_facet Tewfik G
author_sort Tewfik G
title Under-Reporting of a Critical Perioperative Adverse Event: Intravenous Infiltration and Extravasation
title_short Under-Reporting of a Critical Perioperative Adverse Event: Intravenous Infiltration and Extravasation
title_full Under-Reporting of a Critical Perioperative Adverse Event: Intravenous Infiltration and Extravasation
title_fullStr Under-Reporting of a Critical Perioperative Adverse Event: Intravenous Infiltration and Extravasation
title_full_unstemmed Under-Reporting of a Critical Perioperative Adverse Event: Intravenous Infiltration and Extravasation
title_sort under-reporting of a critical perioperative adverse event: intravenous infiltration and extravasation
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Drug, Healthcare and Patient Safety
issn 1179-1365
publishDate 2020-11-01
description George Tewfik Department of Anesthesiology, Rutgers- New Jersey Medical School, Newark, NJ 07103, USACorrespondence: George TewfikDepartment of Anesthesiology, Rutgers- New Jersey Medical School, 185 South Orange Ave, Newark, NJ 07103, USATel +1 973 972-5007Email glt31@njms.rutgers.eduAbstract: A critical step in understanding and preventing potentially disastrous complications in the perioperative period is the accurate recording of their occurrence and subsequent analysis. However, the recording of intravenous infiltration and extravasation is likely inaccurate due to several factors: rare serious complications associated with infiltration/extravasation, limitation in ICD-10 codes to describe the injury, reliance on coders to record these events in searchable databases, and limited quality measures in anesthesiology to record these events. Although current literature cites results of studies that found rates of 16% and higher for intravenous infiltration, a limited internal review at University Hospital in Newark, NJ found significantly lower rates with only 14 instances recorded in an 18-month period across the institution. This leads the author to conclude that interventions are required to better track these events including such steps as staff education and more efficient/accessible reporting systems. The accurate recording and analyzing of data related to adverse events, and in particular regarding infiltration and extravasation, require revision and reinterpretation to gain an accurate picture of their rates.Keywords: infiltration, extravasation, complication rates
topic infiltration
extravasation
complication rates
url https://www.dovepress.com/under-reporting-of-a-critical-perioperative-adverse-event-intravenous--peer-reviewed-article-DHPS
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