GP LAND

Errors in General Practice

Medical errors in general practice usually arise from a combination of patient complexity, clinical uncertainty, time pressure, communication failures, medication risk, recall-system weaknesses, and broader practice governance issues. A strong clinical response should focus on both immediate patient safety and system improvement, rather than blame alone.

Open disclosure is an essential part of managing adverse events. It involves open, honest and timely communication with the patient, family or carer when harm or potential harm has occurred. It includes acknowledging the event, saying sorry or expressing regret, explaining known facts, avoiding speculation or blame, supporting the patient and staff, investigating what happened, and implementing changes to reduce recurrence.


Key Definitions

TermMeaning in General PracticeExample
Medical errorFailure in planning or execution of care. May or may not cause harm.Wrong dose prescribed but identified before patient takes it.
Near missError that could have caused harm but was prevented or did not reach the patient.Abnormal potassium result filed but later detected before harm occurred.
Adverse eventPatient harm associated with healthcare rather than the underlying disease.Delayed cancer diagnosis due to missed follow-up of abnormal imaging.
Sentinel / serious adverse eventSignificant harm, death, or major risk requiring urgent escalation, disclosure and system review.Missed critical result causing severe deterioration.
Recall failureFailure to communicate, action, track or complete follow-up of a clinically significant result or review need.Abnormal Hb, PSA, cervical screening, FIT, imaging or renal function result not conveyed promptly.
Open disclosureOpen discussion with a patient/family/carer after an adverse event.Apologising for a delayed abnormal result, explaining known facts, arranging care and reviewing the system.

Common Types of Errors in General Practice

CategoryExamples
Diagnostic error / delayMissed ACS, stroke/TIA, cancer, sepsis, ectopic pregnancy, meningitis, temporal arteritis.
Medication errorWrong drug, dose, frequency, interaction, allergy, renal dosing error, monitoring failure.
Investigation / recall failureTest not ordered, test not completed, abnormal result not reviewed, patient not contacted, follow-up not tracked.
Referral failureUrgent referral sent as routine, referral not received, no confirmation of appointment, long wait not escalated.
Communication failurePoor handover, unclear safety-netting, incomplete discharge follow-up, language barrier.
Procedural complicationInfection, bleeding, vasovagal episode, retained suture, failed follow-up after procedure.
Immunisation errorWrong vaccine, wrong interval, expired vaccine, cold-chain breach.
Documentation errorWrong patient file, incomplete medication list, missing allergies, unclear plan.
Confidentiality breachEmail, fax, SMS or result sent to wrong recipient.
Safeguarding failureMissed family violence, child protection concern, elder abuse, suicide risk.

Why Errors Occur: Contributing Factors

Patient Factors

FactorExamples
MultimorbidityDiabetes, CKD, heart failure, COPD, frailty, polypharmacy.
Atypical presentationsElderly patients, children, pregnancy, immunosuppression.
Communication barriersLow health literacy, language barrier, hearing impairment, cognitive impairment.
Access barriersCost, transport, homelessness, unstable phone access, fear, cultural barriers.
Non-attendance / non-responseMissed appointments, did not answer calls, voicemail full.
Assumption of “no news is good news”Patient assumes results are normal if not contacted.
Fragmented careMultiple specialists, hospital discharge, RACF, allied health, locum care.

Practitioner Factors

FactorExamples
Cognitive biasAnchoring, premature closure, confirmation bias, diagnostic momentum.
Time pressureShort appointments, multiple issues, running late, interruptions.
Incomplete history/examinationMissed red flags, medication history, allergy status, pregnancy status.
Failure to reassessRepeatedly treating as “viral”, “musculoskeletal” or “anxiety” without review.
Result not reviewed promptlyGP inbox backlog, GP leave, competing urgent tasks.
Abnormality not recognisedTrend missed, mild but significant abnormality overlooked.
Poor safety-nettingPatient not told what deterioration looks like or when to re-present.
Fatigue / cognitive overloadHigh workload, after-hours result review, emotional stress.
Poor documentationNo clear plan, no responsibility assigned, no timeframe recorded.

System Factors — Most Important for Exam Answers

FactorExamples
Weak recall systemNo reliable tracking of abnormal results until completed.
No mandatory “result actioned” workflowResult marked as seen but no documented action.
Poor delegation clarityAdmin unsure whether to phone, SMS, book appointment or escalate.
No escalation pathwayNo policy for non-response to abnormal or urgent results.
IT limitationsNo dashboard for outstanding results, weak alerts, accidental filing.
GP leave cover failureResults not reassigned when requesting doctor is away.
No audit processPractice does not routinely check missed abnormal results.
No incident registerNear misses not captured or reviewed.
Poor inductionNew GP, nurse or reception staff unaware of local recall protocols.
Lack of clinical governanceNo regular review of incidents, complaints or adverse outcomes.

Environmental Factors

FactorExamples
High workloadLarge result inbox, urgent same-day issues, overbooked clinics.
Staffing shortagesInadequate reception, nursing or admin support.
InterruptionsPhone calls, walk-ins, emergencies, competing tasks.
Poor team communicationGP expects phone call; admin sends SMS only; no confirmation loop.
Fragmented interface with hospitalsDelayed discharge summaries, unclear responsibility for follow-up.

Recall Failure: Delayed Communication of Abnormal Result

Example Scenario

A patient had an abnormal investigation result, but there was a delay in conveying the result and arranging appropriate follow-up.

Potential Consequences

ConsequenceExample
Delayed diagnosisCancer, diabetes, renal impairment, infection, anaemia.
Delayed treatmentAntibiotics, anticoagulation, urgent imaging, specialist referral.
Clinical deteriorationSepsis, electrolyte disturbance, bleeding, organ damage.
Psychological harmDistress, loss of trust, anger, complaint.
Medico-legal riskComplaint, negligence claim, AHPRA notification.
System failure identifiedRecall process found to be unreliable.

Factors Contributing to Recall Failure

Patient Factors

  • Incorrect or outdated mobile number, address or email.
  • Did not respond to phone calls, SMS or letters.
  • Voicemail full or phone disconnected.
  • Low health literacy.
  • Language or communication barrier.
  • Unstable housing or poor access to phone/internet.
  • Assumed “no news is good news.”
  • Did not understand importance of follow-up.

Practitioner Factors

  • Result not reviewed promptly.
  • Abnormality not recognised as clinically significant.
  • Trend not reviewed.
  • No clear follow-up plan documented.
  • No timeframe documented.
  • Over-reliance on the patient to arrange review.
  • Cognitive overload, fatigue, interruptions.
  • Poor safety-netting at time of ordering test.

System Factors

  • No robust recall system.
  • Result could be filed without action being documented.
  • No outstanding abnormal-result dashboard.
  • No clear distinction between routine, abnormal, urgent and critical results.
  • Poor delegation between GP, nurse and admin.
  • No escalation policy for failed contact.
  • No backup process when GP is away.
  • IT alerts inadequate or ignored.
  • No audit of abnormal results.
  • No near-miss or incident register.

Environmental Factors

  • Busy practice.
  • Large volume of pathology and imaging results.
  • Staff shortages.
  • Poor communication between reception, nurses and doctors.
  • Multiple clinicians involved.
  • Hospital, specialist or pathology communication delays.

Swiss Cheese Model

The Swiss cheese model explains how adverse events occur when multiple layers of safety fail at the same time.

Each defensive layer has “holes” or weaknesses. Harm occurs when the holes align, allowing the error to pass through all safeguards and reach the patient.

Safety LayerHole / Weakness
Patient detailsPhone number outdated.
GP reviewResult viewed but action not clearly documented.
Admin recallAdmin unsure how urgently to contact patient.
IT systemNo alert for unresolved abnormal result.
Escalation pathwayNo registered letter or emergency contact process after failed calls.
AuditNo routine check of unclosed abnormal results.

Clinical Interpretation

ConceptMeaning
Active errorThe abnormal result was not communicated promptly.
Latent system failureThe practice did not have a reliable recall and escalation system.
Defensive layers failedGP review, admin recall, IT alerts and audit did not prevent the delay.
Main learning pointFocus should be on system improvement, not blame alone.

Immediate Management After an Error or Adverse Event

Step 1 — Make the Patient Safe

The first priority is clinical safety.

ActionExamples
Assess current clinical riskIs the patient unstable, septic, bleeding, suicidal, deteriorating?
Provide immediate treatmentCease incorrect medication, treat adverse effect, arrange monitoring.
Escalate if neededAmbulance, ED referral, urgent specialist advice.
Stop ongoing harmCorrect dose, update allergy, recall affected patients.
Arrange follow-upSame day, next day, phone review, repeat pathology/imaging.

For recall failure, the immediate priority is to:

  • Contact the patient urgently.
  • Assess current clinical status.
  • Explain the abnormal result.
  • Arrange appropriate clinical follow-up.
  • Escalate to ED/specialist care if clinically indicated.
  • Document all actions and communication.

Step 2 — Open Disclosure

https://www.safetyandquality.gov.au/sites/default/files/resources/attachments/open-disclosure-principles-elements-and-process_9.pdf

Open disclosure should occur when an adverse event has caused harm, may have caused harm, or has caused significant distress or loss of trust. It should be timely, honest, empathetic, factual and documented.

Open disclosure may require more than one conversation, especially if all facts are not yet known.

Core Principles of Open Disclosure

PrincipleMeaning in Practice
Open and timely communicationSpeak with the patient/family as soon as practicable.
Provide updates as more facts become available.
AcknowledgementAcknowledge that something went wrong.
Do not minimise or delay communication.
Apology or expression of regretSay sorry for what happened and for the harm or distress caused.
Factual explanationExplain known facts clearly.
Avoid speculation.
No blameDo not blame individuals or make statements beyond the known facts.
Support patient/family/carerAllow questions, acknowledge distress, offer practical and emotional support.
Support staffDeencouraging incident reporting
providing training in open disclosure
offering debriefing and emotional support
avoiding a blame culture
System improvementLink the event to incident review, practice change and audit.
The aim is to understand:
– what happened
– why it happened
– what system factors contributed
– what changes are required to reduce recurrence
ConfidentialityMaintain patient and clinician confidentiality. Document professionally.

Suggested Wording

ComponentExample
Acknowledge“There has been a delay in communicating this abnormal result to you.”
Apologise“I’m sorry this occurred.”
Explain known facts“The result was received on this date and should have been followed up earlier.”
Avoid speculation“We are reviewing exactly how this happened before giving you a final explanation.”
Explain clinical significance“This result means we need to organise…”
Explain next steps“I have arranged repeat bloods / imaging / ED review / urgent referral.”
Prevention“We will review our recall process to reduce the chance of this happening again.”
Support“You are welcome to bring a family member or support person to our next discussion.”

Steps in the Open Disclosure Process

1. Detect and Assess the Incident

Immediate actions:

  • Identify the adverse event or near miss.
  • Assess severity of harm.
  • Provide prompt clinical care to prevent further harm.
  • Notify relevant clinicians or senior staff.
  • Preserve privacy and confidentiality.
  • Support staff involved.

2. Signal the Need for Open Disclosure

Early communication should include:

  • Acknowledgement of the event.
  • Apology or expression of regret.
  • Explanation that further review may be needed.
  • Arrangement of time/place for further discussion if required.
  • Identification of a practice contact person.
  • Avoidance of blame or speculation.

3. Prepare for the Discussion

Before a formal meeting:

  • Gather known facts.
  • Review the clinical record.
  • Clarify who should attend.
  • Appoint a lead clinician.
  • Consider whether family/carers should be present.
  • Prepare a clear factual explanation.
  • Identify support options.
  • Plan documentation.

4. Conduct the Discussion

Include:

  • Introductions and roles of attendees.
  • Apology or expression of regret.
  • Factual explanation of what is known.
  • Opportunity for patient/family to describe their perspective.
  • Opportunity for questions.
  • Discussion of personal impact.
  • Agreed plan for follow-up care.
  • Explanation of investigation/review process.
  • Reassurance that findings and system changes will be communicated.

5. Provide Follow-Up

Follow-up should include:

  • Ongoing clinical care.
  • Updates about review findings.
  • Explanation of changes made to reduce recurrence.
  • Opportunity for further questions.
  • Referral to another clinician if the patient wants another opinion.

6. Complete the Process

At completion:

  • Provide final verbal and/or written communication where appropriate.
  • Document investigation findings.
  • Communicate outcomes to relevant clinicians.
  • Record agreed follow-up care.
  • Document any system improvements.

What to Avoid Saying

Avoid:

  • “It was not my fault.”
  • “The receptionist made a mistake.”
  • “This definitely caused your harm.”
  • “Nothing serious happened.”
  • “These things happen.”
  • “We are liable.”
  • “You should have followed this up yourself.”

Better phrasing:

  • “I am sorry this happened.”
  • “At this stage, these are the facts we know.”
  • “We are reviewing how this occurred.”
  • “We will let you know what we find and what changes we make.”
  • “Our priority now is your care and safety.”

Step 3 — Documentation

Document in a factual, neutral and contemporaneous way.

AreaWhat to Record
Event factsDate, time, what happened, who identified it.
Result detailsTest, date requested, date received, abnormal finding.
DelayWhen the delay was recognised and likely timeframe.
Clinical effectSymptoms, harm, risk, examination findings.
Immediate actionTreatment, referral, escalation, repeat tests.
Contact attemptsPhone, SMS, email, letter, emergency contact, dates/times.
Patient discussionWhat was explained, questions, patient response.
Open disclosureAcknowledgement, apology/expression of regret, factual explanation, patient questions.
Follow-upNamed responsible clinician, timeframe, appointment.
ReportingIncident register, SEA/RCA, MDO advice if relevant.
Quality improvementSystem changes, staff education, audit plan.

Use a dated addendum if further clarification is required. Do not alter old notes.


Step 4 — Internal Reporting

General practice should record incidents and near misses in an incident register.

FieldExample
Date identified20/05/2026
Incident typeAbnormal result not actioned
SeverityNear miss / minor harm / moderate harm / severe harm
Immediate actionPatient contacted, urgent review arranged
Open disclosurePatient informed, apology given, plan explained
Contributing factorsResult filed without clear action; no escalation process
Responsible personTreating GP / practice manager
Corrective actionRecall protocol updated
Review dateOne-month audit

Step 5 — Significant Event Analysis

A Significant Event Analysis is useful because many GP adverse events are system-related rather than purely individual failures.

QuestionPurpose
What happened?Establish facts and timeline.
Why did it happen?Identify contributing factors.
What was the impact?Patient harm, staff impact, system impact.
What went well?Identify protective factors.
What could have gone better?Identify gaps.
What will we change?Corrective actions.
How will we know it worked?Audit, monitoring, feedback.
How will we communicate outcomes?Inform patient/family and staff of review findings and changes where appropriate.

Root Cause Analysis Checklist

Use this instead of asking “Who is to blame?”

DomainQuestions
PatientComplex case? Language barrier? Missed appointment? Incorrect contact details?
TaskWas the task clear? Was it urgent? Was there a protocol?
ClinicianFatigue? Knowledge gap? Cognitive bias? Workload?
TeamWas handover clear? Were roles defined?
EnvironmentInterruptions? Running late? Staffing shortage?
TechnologySoftware issue? Wrong file? Failed reminder?
OrganisationPolicy absent? Poor induction? No audit?
ExternalHospital delay? Referral rejected? Pathology communication issue?
Communication after eventWas open disclosure timely, factual, empathetic and documented?

Preventing Recurrence: System Changes

Recall and Results System

RiskPrevention Strategy
Abnormal result missedAll incoming results must be reviewed and actioned by a GP.
Result filed without actionMandatory “result actioned” field before filing.
No tracking of urgent resultsUrgent result register or dashboard.
Patient not contactedDocumented contact attempts with escalation pathway.
Test ordered but not completedReminder system for non-attendance.
Referral lostTrack urgent referrals until appointment confirmed.
GP awayBuddy system for inbox/result coverage.

Practical Escalation Policy for Abnormal Results

StepAction
1Phone patient for clinically significant abnormal result.
2If no answer, leave safe generic message if appropriate.
3Send SMS requesting urgent contact or appointment, avoiding sensitive detail unless consented.
4Repeat phone contact.
5Send letter.
6Send registered letter for significant unresolved abnormal result.
7Use emergency contact if serious clinical risk and appropriate.
8Consider welfare check / ambulance / ED escalation if immediate risk.
9Document all attempts.
10Keep result open until resolved.

Clear Responsibility

A useful practice rule:

The requesting doctor remains responsible for ensuring clinically significant results are reviewed, actioned and followed up, unless responsibility is clearly transferred and documented.

RoleResponsibility
Requesting GPReview, interpret and action results.
Covering GPManage results when requesting GP absent.
AdminContact patient according to protocol.
NurseAssist with triage, patient education, repeat tests.
Practice managerMaintain recall system, audits, incident register.

Medication Safety Strategies

StrategyExamples
Medication reconciliationAfter hospital discharge, specialist letters, RACF reviews.
High-risk drug registerWarfarin/DOACs, insulin, methotrexate, lithium, opioids.
Renal dosing checkseGFR before NSAIDs, DOACs, metformin, antibiotics.
Allergy verificationCheck before prescribing antibiotics, NSAIDs, opioids, contrast.
Monitoring remindersUEC, LFT, FBC, TFT, INR, lithium levels as appropriate.
Limit unsafe repeatsReview indication, duration and monitoring before ongoing scripts.
Pharmacist collaborationHMR, RMMR, medication review.

Reducing Diagnostic Error

StrategyExamples
Consider “worst first”Rule out ACS, sepsis, ectopic pregnancy, SAH, meningitis before benign diagnosis.
Use red-flag checklistsChest pain, headache, abdominal pain, back pain, paediatrics.
Safety-net clearlyWhat to watch for, when to return, when to call ambulance.
Arrange planned reviewEspecially where diagnosis uncertain.
Revisit diagnosis“What else could this be?”
Use decision supportTherapeutic Guidelines, HealthPathways, RACGP resources.
Seek second opinionSupervisor, peer GP, specialist phone advice, ED discussion.

Communication Safety

SituationSafer Approach
Complex instructionsWritten plan + teach-back.
Urgent referralPhone call + written referral + tracking.
Abnormal resultDirect contact; do not rely on routine SMS alone.
HandoverUse structured handover: situation, background, assessment, recommendation.
RACF escalationClear parameters: symptoms, vitals, when to call GP/ambulance.
Language barrierUse professional interpreter, not family for critical decisions.
After adverse eventOpen disclosure, factual explanation, apology, follow-up and documented system review.

Medical Defence / Medico-Legal Points

For significant harm, delayed diagnosis, death, medication harm, confidentiality breach, complaint risk or regulatory risk:

ActionReason
Contact MDO earlyAdvice on disclosure, documentation and complaint response.
Do not alter old notesUse dated addendum only.
Preserve recordsNotes, results, referrals, messages, call logs.
Avoid blame/speculationStick to known facts.
Do not admit liabilityApologise or express regret, but avoid legal conclusions.
Continue care if appropriateDo not abandon the patient.
Support staffClinicians may experience guilt, distress and loss of confidence after adverse events.

GP Adverse Event Note Template (example)

Event

Patient experienced an adverse event involving:

  • Delay in communication of abnormal result
  • Medication prescribing error
  • Missed recall
  • Delayed referral
  • Incorrect vaccination/storage issue
  • Documentation or handover failure

Example:

Delay in communication of abnormal pathology/imaging result requiring clinical follow-up.

Immediate Clinical Assessment

Patient contacted/reviewed on:
Current symptoms/clinical status:
Immediate risk assessed: low / moderate / high
Urgent care required: yes / no

Actions taken:

  • Clinical review arranged.
  • Repeat test/investigation requested.
  • Medication changed/ceased if relevant.
  • Referral arranged.
  • ED transfer arranged if clinically indicated.
  • Safety-netting provided.
  • Follow-up appointment booked.

Open Disclosure

  • Adverse event acknowledged with patient/family.
  • Apology or expression of regret provided.
  • Known facts explained clearly.
  • Speculation and blame avoided.
  • Patient given opportunity to ask questions and describe concerns.
  • Follow-up plan agreed.
  • Patient advised that the event will be reviewed.
  • Patient advised that relevant findings and system changes will be communicated where appropriate.

example……..

I explained that there had been a delay/error in [brief factual description]. I apologised for the distress and potential harm caused. I explained the known facts, advised that the matter would be reviewed, and discussed the immediate clinical plan. The patient was given the opportunity to ask questions and express concerns. Follow-up arrangements were agreed.

Contributing Factors

Patient Factors

  • Outdated or incorrect contact details.
  • Non-response to calls/messages.
  • Difficulty understanding recall instructions.
  • Complex psychosocial circumstances.

Practitioner Factors

  • Delayed review of result.
  • Unclear follow-up plan.
  • Cognitive overload/fatigue.
  • Competing clinical priorities.

System Factors

  • Inadequate recall/reminder system.
  • Unclear delegation between clinician and admin staff.
  • No escalation pathway for abnormal results.
  • IT limitations.
  • Lack of audit process.
  • Inadequate documentation/handover.

Environmental Factors

  • High workload.
  • Staffing shortages.
  • Communication gaps.
  • Interruptions or workflow pressure.

Swiss Cheese Model Interpretation

This adverse event likely resulted from multiple aligned failures rather than one isolated mistake.

Possible layers:

  • Abnormal result generated.
  • Result not reviewed promptly.
  • Recall not actioned or escalated.
  • Patient not contacted successfully.
  • No audit detected the unresolved result.

This reflects both:

  • Active errors — actions or omissions at the point of care.
  • Latent system failures — weaknesses in processes, IT systems, escalation pathways, staffing or governance.

Management Plan

Patient Care

  • Assess current clinical risk.
  • Arrange appropriate investigations/treatment.
  • Escalate to ED/specialist care if clinically indicated.
  • Provide clear safety-net advice.
  • Arrange follow-up appointment.
  • Document all communication.

Communication

  • Provide open disclosure.
  • Offer written summary if appropriate.
  • Provide contact person for further questions.
  • Offer opportunity to speak with another clinician.
  • Update patient/family after review where appropriate.

Practice/System Improvement

  • Incident report completed.
  • Recall and results-management process reviewed.
  • Responsibility for abnormal result follow-up clarified.
  • Escalation pathway for urgent/abnormal results implemented.
  • Patient contact details checked at each visit.
  • Audit of outstanding recalls/results arranged.
  • Staff education/debrief completed.
  • Effectiveness of changes reviewed.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.