Allergy Safety Events in Health Care: Development and Application of a Classification Schema Based on Retrospective Review

J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract. 2022 Jul;10(7):1844-1855.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.jaip.2022.03.026. Epub 2022 Apr 8.

Abstract

Background: Allergy safety requires understanding the operational processes that expose patients to their known allergens, including how and when such processes fail.

Objective: To improve health care safety for patients with allergies, we developed and assessed an allergy safety event classification schema to describe failures resulting in allergy-related safety events.

Methods: Using keyword searches followed by expert manual review of 299,031 voluntarily-filed safety event reports at 2 large academic medical centers, we identified and classified allergy-related safety events from 5 years of safety reports. We used driver diagrams to elucidate root causes for commonly observed allergy safety events in health care settings.

Results: From 299,031 safety reports, 1922 (0.6%) were extracted with keywords and 744 (0.2%) were manually confirmed as allergy-related safety events. Safety failures were due to incomplete/inaccurate electronic health record documentation (n = 375, 50.4%), human factors (n = 175, 23.5%), allergy alert limitation and/or malfunction (n = 127, 17.1%), data exchange and interoperability failures (n = 92, 12.4%), and electronic health record system default options (n = 30, 4.0%). Safety failures resulted in known allergen exposures to drugs (n = 537), including heparin (n = 27) and topical anesthetics such as lidocaine (n = 8); latex (n = 114); food allergens (n = 73); and adhesive (n = 23).

Conclusions: We identified 744 allergy-related safety events to inform a novel safety failure classification schema as an important step toward a safer health care environment for patients with allergies. Improved systems are required to address safety issues with certain food and drug allergens.

Keywords: Allergy safety hazard/failure; Drug allergy; Food allergy; Patient safety.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Allergens
  • Delivery of Health Care
  • Documentation
  • Drug Hypersensitivity* / epidemiology
  • Food Hypersensitivity*
  • Humans
  • Retrospective Studies

Substances

  • Allergens