• Postgrad Med J · Sep 2024

    Critical tasks and errors associated with intercostal chest drain insertion.

    • Samuel Kuan, Richard Lynch, and Angela O Dea.
    • Emergency Medicine Consultant, Emergency Department Regional Hospital, Longford Road, Mullingar, County Westmeath N91 NA43, Ireland.
    • Postgrad Med J. 2024 Sep 6.

    IntroductionTo describe critical tasks and errors associated with intercostal chest drain insertion, in order to develop enhanced procedural guidelines for task performance and training.MethodsExpert emergency medicine physicians participated in a three-phased study. First, hierarchical task analyses was used to identify tasks, sub-tasks, and the sequence of tasks. Second, systematic human error reduction and prediction approach was used to identify and classify the errors associated with each sub-task culminating in a probability, criticality, and detectability rating for each error. Third, failure modes, effects and criticality analysis technique was used to convert probability and criticality estimates to occurrence and severity scores. Criticality index score, a measure of the propensity for the error to cause harm or procedural failure for each error, was calculated and the top 20 errors most likely to cause harm were ranked.ResultsThirteen tasks and 61 sub-tasks were identified and yielded 86 potential errors. Error classification included errors of action, checking, and selection. The error with the highest criticality score was 'identifying a point of entry lower than the fifth intercostal space'. The top four ranked errors all relate to the identification and correct marking of the location site for the intercostal drain within the safe triangle.ConclusionsTasks and sub-tasks associated with intercostal chest drain insertion was described and evaluated for criticality. The most critical task was the correct identification of a safe insertion point. Applications include development of procedural guidelines with tasks vulnerable to error highlighted and training interventions that promotes safe task performance.© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

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