ECRI Institute Issues Technology Hazards List for 2016

Reprocessing of flexible endoscopes rises to #1 hazard; failure to recognize clinical alarms, health IT errors and other issues remain perennial hazards.

Every year hospitals are blindsided and patients are harmed by unexpected health technology hazards. Medical technology is intended to improve patient care, but even the best technology—if configured, used, or maintained improperly—can lead to problems. 

“With all of the issues that hospital leaders are dealing with, technology safety can often be overlooked,” says Anthony Montagnolo, chief operating officer, ECRI Institute. “Based on our experience with independent medical device testing in our laboratory, accident investigations, and reported events, we’re very aware of serious safety problems that occur.”

To help hospitals prioritize technology safety efforts that warrant their attention and to reduce risks to patients, ECRI Institute publishes an annual list of top 10 health technology hazards. The 2016 Top 10 Health Technology Hazards list, released in November, includes both high-profile and unexpected issues, as well as ones that are emerging, such as hazards related to electronic health records.

A series of fatal Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) infections that attracted national media attention in 2014 and 2015—combined with ECRI Institute’s own studies into endoscope cleaning and disinfection practices—prompted ECRI safety engineers to elevate flexible endoscope reprocessing to the top of the 2016 list. This year’s top hazard specifically addresses the need to adequately clean flexible endoscopes before disinfection to help prevent the spread of deadly pathogens.

Safety risks from clinical alarms, a perennial No. 1 hazard, moved down to the No. 2 spot. Failure to recognize and respond to actionable clinical alarm conditions in a timely manner can result in serious patient injury or death, according to ECRI’s report. It remains an important issue for hospitals as non-compliance with the Joint Commission’s January 1, 2016, deadline for its National Patient Safety Goal on clinical alarms can put patients at risk of harm.

Other topics on the 2016 list include failure to effectively monitor post-op patients for opioid-induced respiratory depression, inadequate surveillance of telemetry-monitored patients, insufficient physician training on new OR technologies, health IT errors, gamma camera mechanical failures, and more.

To develop the annual list, ECRI Institute’s multidisciplinary staff of engineers, scientists, nurses, physicians, and safety analysts draw on the resources of the Institute’s nearly 50-year history, as well as expertise and insight gained through testing and analyzing healthcare technologies. Topics on the list take into account factors such severity, frequency, breadth, insidiousness, profile, and preventability.

To download the 2016 Top 10 Health Technology Hazards Brief  for free, visit www.ecri.org/2016hazards. For questions about the technology hazards or to purchase the comprehensive 2016 Top 10 Health Technology Hazards Solutions Kit, contact ECRI Institute by telephone at (610) 825-6000, ext. 5891, or by e-mail at clientservices@ecri.org.