Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Pauline Occelli is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Pauline Occelli.


Journal of Healthcare Risk Management | 2011

Development of a safety culture: initial measurements at six hospitals in France.

Pauline Occelli; Jean-Luc Quenon; Bruno Hubert; Thomas Kosciolek; Hélène Hoarau; Marie‐Laure Pouchadon; René Amalberti; Yves Auroy; Louis‐Rachid Salmi; Matthieu Sibé; Pierre Parneix; Philippe Michel

A cross-sectional and descriptive survey of a safety culture (SC) was conducted in 20 clinical units in France. A self-administered questionnaire measuring 12 dimensions of safety culture was given to healthcare professionals. The overall response rate was 65%. The poorly developed dimensions of safety culture that were identified were nonpunitive response to error, staffing, management support for patient safety, handoffs, and transitions.


European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology | 2014

Severe postpartum haemorrhage after vaginal delivery: a statistical process control chart to report seven years of continuous quality improvement

Corinne Dupont; Pauline Occelli; Catherine Deneux Tharaux; Sandrine Touzet; Antoine Duclos; Marie Hélène Bouvier-Colle; René-Charles Rudigoz; Cyril Huissoud

UNLABELLED Severe postpartum haemorrhage after vaginal delivery: a statistical process control chart to report seven years of continuous quality improvement OBJECTIVE To use statistical process control charts to describe trends in the prevalence of severe postpartum haemorrhage after vaginal delivery. This assessment was performed 7 years after we initiated a continuous quality improvement programme that began with regular criteria-based audits STUDY DESIGN Observational descriptive study, in a French maternity unit in the Rhône-Alpes region. INTERVENTION Quarterly clinical audit meetings to analyse all cases of severe postpartum haemorrhage after vaginal delivery and provide feedback on quality of care with statistical process control tools. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The primary outcomes were the prevalence of severe PPH after vaginal delivery and its quarterly monitoring with a control chart. The secondary outcomes included the global quality of care for women with severe postpartum haemorrhage, including the performance rate of each recommended procedure. Differences in these variables between 2005 and 2012 were tested. RESULTS From 2005 to 2012, the prevalence of severe postpartum haemorrhage declined significantly, from 1.2% to 0.6% of vaginal deliveries (p<0.001). Since 2010, the quarterly rate of severe PPH has not exceeded the upper control limits, that is, been out of statistical control. The proportion of cases that were managed consistently with the guidelines increased for all of their main components. CONCLUSION Implementation of continuous quality improvement efforts began seven years ago and used, among other tools, statistical process control charts. During this period, the prevalence of severe postpartum haemorrhage after vaginal delivery has been reduced by 50%.


BMC Health Services Research | 2013

Multifaceted intervention to enhance the screening and care of hospitalised malnourished children: study protocol for the PREDIRE cluster randomized controlled trial

Sandrine Touzet; Antoine Duclos; Angélique Denis; Lioara Restier-Miron; Pauline Occelli; S. Polazzi; Daniel Betito; Guillaume Gamba; Fleur Cour-Andlauer; Cyrille Colin; A. Lachaux; Noël Peretti

BackgroundHospital malnutrition is an underestimated problem and as many as half of malnourished patients do not receive appropriate treatment. In order to extend the management of malnutrition in health care facilities, multidisciplinary teams focusing on clinical nutrition were established in France. The establishment of such teams within hospital facilities remains nonetheless difficult. We have consequently developed a multifaceted intervention coordinated by a Nutritional Support Team (NST). Our study aims to evaluate the impact of this multifaceted intervention coordinated by a NST, in adherence to recommended practices for the care of malnourished children, among health care workers of a paediatric university hospital.Methods/designWe carried out 1) a six-month observational phase focusing on the medical care procedures relative to malnourished children followed by 2) a cluster randomised controlled trial phase to evaluate the impact of a multidisciplinary nutrition team over an 18 month time frame.Based on power analyses and assuming a conservative intracluster correlation coefficient, 1289 children were needed to detect a 25% difference in rates between the two groups of the cluster trial.The implementation of our intervention was coordinated by the NST and had three major components: a) access to a computerised malnutrition screening system associated with an automatic alert system, b) an awareness campaign directed toward the health care workers and c) a leadership based strategy.Main outcomes included the number of daily weighings during hospitalisation, the investigation of malnutrition etiology and the management of malnutrition by a dietician and/or the NST.Due to the clustered nature of the data with children nested in departments, a generalized estimated equations approach will be used to analyse the impact of the multifaceted intervention on primary and secondary outcomes.DiscussionOur results will provide an overall response regarding the effectiveness of our multifaceted intervention and we should be able to suggest an organization and mode of operation of NST.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01081587.


Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice | 2015

Incorrect evaluation of the frequency of malnutrition and of its screening in hospitalized children by health care professionals.

Lioara Restier; Antoine Duclos; Laura Jarri; Sandrine Touzet; Angélique Denis; Pauline Occelli; Behrouz Kassai-Koupai; Alain Lachaux; Irène Loras-Duclaux; Cyrille Colin; Noël Peretti

RATIONALE, AIMS AND OBJECTIVES Malnutrition screening is essential to detect and to treat patients with stunting or wasting. The aim was to evaluate the subjective perception of frequency and assessment of malnutrition by health care professionals. RESEARCH METHODS AND PROCEDURES In a paediatric university hospital, a cross-sectional survey was conducted with a Likert scale approach to health care professionals and compared with objective measurements on a given day of frequency of malnutrition and of its screening. RESULTS 279 health care professionals participated. The malnutrition rate, estimated versus measured, was 16.8% and 34.8%, respectively. Conversely, the estimated frequency of malnutrition screening versus measured frequency was 80.6% versus 43.1%, respectively. Furthermore, the perception of health care professionals did not differ depending on their professional category or speciality. CONCLUSIONS In conclusion, health care staff underestimates the prevalence of malnutrition in children by half and overestimates the frequency of appropriate screening practices for detection of malnutrition. This flawed/unreliable perception may disrupt both screening and the management of malnourished children. There is an urgent need to find out the reasons behind these errors caused by subjective perception in order to develop appropriate educational training to remedy the situation.


International Journal for Quality in Health Care | 2013

Validation of the French version of the Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture questionnaire

Pauline Occelli; Jean-Luc Quenon; Marion Kret; Sandrine Domecq; Delaperche F; Claverie O; Castets-Fontaine B; René Amalberti; Yves Auroy; Pierre Parneix; Philippe Michel


Etudes et résultats | 2007

Les systèmes de signalement des évènements indésirables en médecine

René Amalberti; C. Gremion; Yves Auroy; Philippe Michel; Rachid Salmi; Pierre Parneix; M.L. Pouchadon; H. Hoarau; Pauline Occelli; Jean-Luc Quenon; B. Hubert


BMC Geriatrics | 2016

Impact of a transition nurse program on the prevention of thirty-day hospital readmissions of elderly patients discharged from short-stay units: study protocol of the PROUST stepped-wedge cluster randomised trial

Pauline Occelli; Sandrine Touzet; Muriel Rabilloud; Christell Ganne; Stéphanie Bourdy; Béatrice Galamand; Matthieu Debray; André Dartiguepeyrou; Michel Chuzeville; Brigitte Comte; Basile Turkie; Magali Tardy; Jean-Stéphane Luiggi; Thierry Jacquet-Francillon; Thomas Gilbert; Marc Bonnefoy


BMJ Open | 2017

Impact of the Early Start Denver Model on the cognitive level of children with autism spectrum disorder: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial using a two-stage Zelen design

Sandrine Touzet; Pauline Occelli; Carmen Schroder; Sabine Manificat; Ludovic Gicquel; Razvana Stanciu; Marie Schaer; Marie-Joelle Oreve; Mario Speranza; Angélique Denis; Amélie Zelmar; Bruno Falissard; Nicolas Georgieff; Stephane Bahrami; Marie-Maude Geoffray


Sante Publique | 2018

L’émergence du patient-acteur dans la sécurité des soins en France : une revue narrative de la littérature entre sciences sociales et santé publique

Frédéric Mougeot; Magali Robelet; Claude Rambaud; Pauline Occelli; Karine Buchet-Poyau; Sandrine Touzet; Philippe Michel


International Journal for Quality in Health Care | 2018

Improving the safety climate in hospitals by a vignette-based analysis of adverse events: a cluster randomised study

Pauline Occelli; Jean-Luc Quenon; Marion Kret; Sandrine Domecq; Angélique Denis; Florence Delaperche; Olivier Claverie; Benjamin Castets-Fontaine; René Amalberti; Yves Auroy; Pierre Parneix; Philippe Michel

Collaboration


Dive into the Pauline Occelli's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge