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Integrating equity into hospital incident reporting and patient concerns systems: study protocol for a mixed methods study

Title: Integrating equity into hospital incident reporting and patient concerns systems: study protocol for a mixed methods study
Authors: Brian M Wong; Leahora Rotteau; Patricia Trbovich; Kent Cadogan Loftsgard; Maitreya Coffey; Myrtede Alfred; Kelly Smith; Ayelet Kuper; Joanne Goldman; Shail Rawal; Lisha Lo; Ward Flemons; Carolyn Canfield; Irfan Dhalla; Franco Carnevale; Saleem Razack; Rishma Chooniedass; Esha Ray Chaudhuri; Marie Pinard; Michael Palomo; Brett Diaz; Allison Kooijman; Andrew Milroy; Arvin Minocha; Carol Anderson; Jean Beckett; Judy Birdsell; Devin Harris; James Hund; Yasir Khalid; Glenn McRae; Nichole Pereira; BC Pomeroy; Nazret Russon; Lisa Weget
Source: BMJ Open, Vol 15, Iss 11 (2025)
Publisher Information: BMJ Publishing Group, 2025.
Publication Year: 2025
Collection: LCC:Medicine
Subject Terms: Medicine
Description: Introduction Preventable hospital patient harm events disproportionally affect certain patient populations. For some, harm extends beyond physical injury to include cultural, emotional or spiritual impacts. While these disparities are linked to socio-demographics (eg, race, education), they are driven by structural factors (eg, procedures and policies). Patient safety monitoring systems (eg, incident reporting, patient concerns) were not originally designed to identify equity-related harms and may inadvertently obscure or reinforce the injustices they should address. This study will examine how equity is currently considered within hospital incident reporting and patient concerns systems across Canada and will identify opportunities to strengthen these systems’ responsiveness to inequities in patient safety.Methods and analysis This 3-year exploratory sequential mixed-method study began in September 2024. Phase one involves qualitative interviews with patient safety and equity leads, patients/families/caregivers and leaders of innovative initiatives to explore current practices, gaps and innovations in how equity-related factors are identified and addressed within incident reporting and patient concerns systems. Findings will inform Phase 2, a modified Delphi process with patient safety and equity experts and persons with lived experience of equity-related harm events to refine and reach consensus on key equity-promoting features, considerations and recommendations for these systems. In Phase 3, consensus items will be used to develop a national cross-sectional survey assessing the extent to which equity is integrated into hospital incident reporting and patient concerns systems in Canada. A patient advisory committee will inform data collection, interpretation of findings and dissemination.Ethics and dissemination Ethics approval has been received for Phase 1, with subsequent approvals to be sought for later phases. Dissemination plans include peer-reviewed publications, presentations at international conferences and knowledge exchange activities to inform patient engagement, the design of incident reporting and patient concerns systems and policy development.
Document Type: article
File Description: electronic resource
Language: English
ISSN: 2044-6055
Relation: https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/15/11/e111054.full; https://doaj.org/toc/2044-6055
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2025-111054
Access URL: https://doaj.org/article/2cfbfc13e6ff4dc38318c07bc6fc0ce1
Accession Number: edsdoj.2cfbfc13e6ff4dc38318c07bc6fc0ce1
Database: Directory of Open Access Journals