Adverse incidents and near misses
B106
An adverse incident is where harm has occurred, and a near miss is where harm could have occurred.
B107
If an adverse incident occurs you should:
- apologise to the patient
- explain what has happened
- explain any remedial action.
This is what is meant by the duty of candour.
B108
If necessary, you should also:
- investigate the adverse incident
- take the appropriate action
- keep a written record.
B109
You should record any adverse incident somewhere central to the practice, for example in your practice’s system or in the practice Accident Book. This applies even if it was not due to any fault of the practice or practitioner.
B110
If a near miss occurs, you should learn from it and you should reassure the patient if you think it caused them concern.
B111
You should report any near misses or adverse clinical incidents involving patients receiving NHS-funded care:
- in England and Wales to the National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS). This does not collect any patient or practitioner identifiable information223
- in Scotland to your local health board226
- in Northern Ireland to the Northern Ireland Adverse Incident Centre.224
B112
If the adverse incident was due to a drug or medical device you should report this to the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency, as appropriate.225, 227 See sections on Infection control and Use and supply of drugs or medicines in optometric practice.
References
223 Learning from patient safety incidents [Accessed 1 Nov 2023]224 Northern Ireland Adverse Incident Centre (NIAIC). Reporting an adverse incident [Accessed 1 Nov 2023]
225 MHRA Yellow Card Scheme [Accessed 1 Nov 2023]
226 Learning from adverse events through reporting and review. A national framework for Scotland: December 2019 [Accessed 1 Nov 2023]
227 MHRA. Report a problem with a medicine or medical device [Accessed 1 Nov 2023]