Adverse nursing event grading includes: first-degree adverse events, second-degree nursing adverse events, and third-degree nursing adverse events. Grade I adverse events: refers to the patient has been tissue and organ damage, disability, death and other serious nursing adverse events. Secondary care adverse events: refers to the nursing event has caused serious pain to the patient, can be divided into no harm, mild harm, moderate harm, severe harm, etc..
Tertiary care adverse event: refers to the nursing adverse event did not really happen or the adverse event did not cause significant impact on the patient, or it may be non-nursing behavior caused the adverse event.
Detailed introduction
Adverse event of the first level refers to the events that have occurred, resulting in the patient's death, disability, tissue and organ damage leading to functional impairment, aggravation of the condition, delayed recovery, or one of the following circumstances, namely, nursing fault behavior caused by valid complaints or disputes, hospital infection outbreaks, surgical identity site identification error, the body surgical instruments left behind, patient's death due to accidental events.
Second-degree nursing adverse events refer to events that have occurred and increased patient suffering, but have no effect on the patient's condition or treatment outcome, and the degree of harm to the patient from the event is categorized as no harm, mild harm, moderate harm, and heavy trial harm. In addition to the above 10 categories of situations in addition to 8 and 9 categories of situations, other situations that have occurred and involved patients but have not yet reached the first level of nursing adverse events are included in the scope of this level.
Adverse nursing events at level 3 are hidden events, which are events where the adverse event did not actually occur or the event did not involve the patient due to inadvertent or real-time interventions, or events that are not the result of a nursing action (e.g., public **** facility events, medical equipment and device events).