A groundbreaking multi-state study has unveiled critical insights into the frequency and nature of safety events occurring in the home care of children with medical complexity, a vulnerable population characterized by multisystem chronic conditions requiring intensive, long-term medical support. Published recently in JAMA Network Open, the research reveals that over 10% of these children experience at least one incident reported by home care staff, with a staggering proportion of these events resulting in harm. These findings signal a pressing need to rethink and enhance safety protocols for pediatric home healthcare.
Children with medical complexity, often reliant on sophisticated home care regimens, present unique challenges that compound the difficulty of ensuring safe care environments outside traditional clinical settings. Ranging from the administration of numerous medications to the maintenance and use of implanted medical devices such as gastrostomy tubes and ventilators, these children require technically advanced support tailored to their fragile health status. The outpatient nature of their care imposes significant risks that are less well-documented and addressed compared to inpatient hospital settings, spotlighting an urgent gap in healthcare safety research.
The interdisciplinary team led by Dr. Carolyn Foster at the Stanley Manne Children’s Research Institute undertook a comprehensive analysis of incident reports filed by a national pediatric home healthcare agency spanning 11 states in the U.S. Over a one-year period, data from 2,901 pediatric patients under 21 years old were meticulously examined, illuminating a concerning safety landscape. More than 680 incident reports—equivalent to nearly 12% of this patient cohort—were registered, indicating a non-trivial occurrence of safety lapses in home care delivery.
Delving into the types of errors recorded, medication errors emerged as the leading category, representing 38.8% of reported incidents. This disproportionate representation underscores the critical role pharmacy management plays in home health contexts, where dosing complexities, polypharmacy, and device-mediated medication administration increase the potential for mishaps. Implanted devices accounted for an additional 32.7% of errors, emphasizing the technical challenges and maintenance demands inherent in managing life-sustaining technologies within domiciliary settings.
The consequences of safety incidents were significant. Approximately 25% of incidents led to tangible harm, with the most frequent adverse outcomes being non-pressure skin injuries and falls. Such events compromise the child’s immediate well-being and can precipitate longer-term health detriments, requiring urgent attention to preventive strategies. Nearly half of all events necessitated additional clinical monitoring, and emergency care was required in over 16%, underscoring the gravity of home healthcare safety failures.
The study’s nuanced exploration identified that children receiving nursing-level care, particularly those with the highest complexity of medical conditions, bore the greatest risk for sustaining safety events. Of particular concern were children dependent on invasive home ventilation, who exhibited markedly elevated vulnerability. This subgroup’s dependence on continuous mechanical respiratory support, coupled with the complexity of ventilation management, likely exacerbates the probability of adverse events occurring outside of hospital surveillance.
In response to these findings, Dr. Foster advocates for targeted interventions designed to shield this fragile population from avoidable harms. Integral to this approach is the recognition of family caregivers as crucial stakeholders. Their unique vantage point within the home environment and their central role in daily care position them as vital contributors to safety monitoring and innovation. Engaging these caregivers in event reporting and the design of safety interventions promises a more holistic, grounded approach to risk mitigation.
Moreover, the research team emphasizes the necessity of incorporating pediatric patients and their families into national mandates for home care event reporting. Current systems predominantly focus on adult populations, leaving pediatric safety data underrepresented. Establishing pediatric-specific reporting frameworks would facilitate accountability, inform policy, and guide the development of rigorous, child-centered nursing training standards that parallel adult care competencies but respond to the distinct needs of pediatric populations.
The methodology underpinning this study integrates a system-level analysis of reported events, transcending anecdotal or institutionally narrow perspectives. This systemic viewpoint enables a granular understanding of multifactorial causation, contributing to a robust evidence base for quality improvement initiatives. The Patient Safety Learning Lab, a federally funded collaborative effort involving leading children’s hospitals and home care agencies, provided the platform for this research, reflecting a concerted movement towards elevating home care safety standards.
Dr. Foster’s leadership role as the Yaeger Family Research Scholar highlights the critical nexus between academic research and clinical application, fostering innovations poised to transform pediatric healthcare delivery outside hospitals. By illuminating prevalent safety vulnerabilities through rigorous data analysis, her team is spearheading efforts to transition from reactive incident response to proactive, preventive care models that safeguard children’s wellbeing within their homes.
Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, the institution anchoring this research, exemplifies a commitment to excellence in pediatric medicine. As an independent, research-driven children’s hospital renowned nationally, it serves not only as a treatment center but also as an epicenter for education and pioneering research, where interdisciplinary collaborations continuously strive to enhance child health outcomes.
This study’s revelations vividly illustrate the intricate challenges and significant risks entwined with pediatric home healthcare. Moving forward, the integration of robust surveillance systems, comprehensive caregiver training, standardized reporting, and policy reforms will be imperative in closing safety gaps. By doing so, the healthcare community can aspire to provide the highest standard of care for the nearly three million children with medical complexity, enriching their quality of life and reducing preventable suffering.
Subject of Research:
Article Title:
News Publication Date:
Web References: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2848562
References: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2026.10321
Image Credits:
Keywords: Children, Medical Complexity, Home Care, Patient Safety, Pediatric Healthcare, Medication Errors, Implanted Devices, Invasive Ventilation, Healthcare Delivery, Pediatric Nursing

