Comparison of physicians' and dentists' incident reports in open data from the Japan Council for Quality Health Care: a mixed-method study

Patient safety is associated with patient outcomes. However, there is insufficient evidence of patient safety in the dental field. This study aimed to compare incidents reported by dentists and physicians, compare the type of errors made by them, and identify how dentists prevent dental errors. A mi...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC oral health 2023-02, Vol.23 (1), p.67-8, Article 67
Hauptverfasser: Akiyama, Naomi, Akiyama, Tomoya, Sato, Hideaki, Shiroiwa, Takeru, Kishi, Mitsuo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Patient safety is associated with patient outcomes. However, there is insufficient evidence of patient safety in the dental field. This study aimed to compare incidents reported by dentists and physicians, compare the type of errors made by them, and identify how dentists prevent dental errors. A mixed-methods study was conducted using open data from the Japan Council for Quality Health Care database. A total of 6071 incident reports submitted for the period 2016-2020 were analyzed; the number of dentists' incident reports was 144, and the number of physicians' incident reports was 5927. The percentage of dental intern reporters was higher than that of medical intern reporters (dentists: n = 12, 8.3%; physicians: n = 180, 3.0%; p = 0.002). The percentage of reports by dentists was greater than that by physicians: wrong part of body treated (dentists: n = 26, 18.1%; physicians: n = 120, 2.0%; p 
ISSN:1472-6831
1472-6831
DOI:10.1186/s12903-023-02749-x