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Course Objectives. Importance of Patient SafetySystem Approach to Errors Quality Care- Regulatory
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1. Patient Safety- What You Should Know
2. Course Objectives Importance of Patient Safety
System Approach to Errors
Quality Care- Regulatory & Consumer Response
Implementing a Patient Safety Program
Creating a Culture of Safety
Tools and Resources
Simulations- Case Illustration
System Approach to Errors- how do errors actually take place in healthcare?
Quality Care- How have Regulatory Agencies and Consumers responded to the IOM report?
Implementing a patient Safety Program- You hear about robotics, CPOE etc is it all high tech or are there simple things that all hospitals can implement?
Creating a Culture of Safety what exactly is this?System Approach to Errors- how do errors actually take place in healthcare?
Quality Care- How have Regulatory Agencies and Consumers responded to the IOM report?
Implementing a patient Safety Program- You hear about robotics, CPOE etc is it all high tech or are there simple things that all hospitals can implement?
Creating a Culture of Safety what exactly is this?
3. Adverse Drug Event- What exactly are we talking about? Error An error is defined as the failure of a planned action to be completed as intended or the use of a wrong plan to achieve an aim. Errors can include problems in practice, products, procedures and systems
Examples medication, surgical errors, diagnostic errors (misdiagnoses, incorrect therapy or treatment, failure to use indicated diagnostic test), equipment failures (defibrillator without working batteries or a free-flowing IV solution.) nosocomial infections, blood transfusion related injuries, deaths due to restraint use
Adverse Drug Event- injuries that result from the use of drugs. They can include prescribing, dispensing and administration errors. Adverse Drug events that are associated with a medication error are considered preventable, while those not associated with a medication error (e.g. known medication side effect) is considered non-preventable.
Iatrogenic Injury injuries due to medical care
Sentinel Event- A sentinel event is defined as an unexpected occurrence, involving death or serious physical or psychological injury or risk thereof
4. Medication Error Definition
5. Harvard Medical Practice Study 1984 New York Study - up to 98,000 deaths1992 Colorado/ Utah Study - 44,000 deaths The IOMs Quality of Healthcare in America Project started its work in June of 1998. It used the information from two key studies and published its result in November of 1999.
Lucian Leape and colleagues published a two part series in 1991 in the New England Journal of Medicine called the The Harvard Medical Practice Study. This was a retrospective study of adverse events in 30,000 medical records from 51 hospitals in New York state from 1984. 3.7% of the patients suffered an Adverse Event (defined as a extended hospital stay, permanent disability at the time of discharge or death). Of this group of 3.7%, 58% were preventable, negligent care accounted for 28% of these patients, 13.6% died as a result of these errors and 2.6% suffered permanent disability.
A similar study by Eric Thomas in Colorado and Utah of some 15,000 patient records found a similar adverse event rate of 2.9% from data collected in 1992. This report was only pubished in early 1999 and it found that 53% of the adverse events were preventable with negligence accounting for 27% of these patient injuries. Adverse events leading to death were 6.6%.
If you use the lower number of deaths, it is the eighth most frequent cause of death. More people die from errors in healthcare than die each year from Breast Cancer (43,458), Automobile accidents (42,297) and AIDS (16,516) . Bates has found that 6.5% of admissions experience an Adverse Event
Medication errors were the most common adverse event, accounting for 19% of all adverse events and were responsible for a disabling injury in 0.7% of hospitalized patients.
The Institute of Medicine report noted that healthcare system flaws were responsible for medical errors. Some of the system flaws noted in the report included illegible handwriting, look-alike and sound alike medication names and unsafe medication floor stocking practices.
.The IOMs Quality of Healthcare in America Project started its work in June of 1998. It used the information from two key studies and published its result in November of 1999.
Lucian Leape and colleagues published a two part series in 1991 in the New England Journal of Medicine called the The Harvard Medical Practice Study. This was a retrospective study of adverse events in 30,000 medical records from 51 hospitals in New York state from 1984. 3.7% of the patients suffered an Adverse Event (defined as a extended hospital stay, permanent disability at the time of discharge or death). Of this group of 3.7%, 58% were preventable, negligent care accounted for 28% of these patients, 13.6% died as a result of these errors and 2.6% suffered permanent disability.
A similar study by Eric Thomas in Colorado and Utah of some 15,000 patient records found a similar adverse event rate of 2.9% from data collected in 1992. This report was only pubished in early 1999 and it found that 53% of the adverse events were preventable with negligence accounting for 27% of these patient injuries. Adverse events leading to death were 6.6%.
If you use the lower number of deaths, it is the eighth most frequent cause of death. More people die from errors in healthcare than die each year from Breast Cancer (43,458), Automobile accidents (42,297) and AIDS (16,516) . Bates has found that 6.5% of admissions experience an Adverse Event
Medication errors were the most common adverse event, accounting for 19% of all adverse events and were responsible for a disabling injury in 0.7% of hospitalized patients.
The Institute of Medicine report noted that healthcare system flaws were responsible for medical errors. Some of the system flaws noted in the report included illegible handwriting, look-alike and sound alike medication names and unsafe medication floor stocking practices.
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6. To Err is HumanBuilding A Safer Health System Recommendations
Congress to create a Center for Patient Safety
Establish a national mandatory reporting system std info state govt. ADE death or serious patient harm
The Center for Patient Safety should improve efforts for voluntary reporting systems
Congress to pass legislation peer review protection
Performance stds. & expectations- Health care organizations & professionals must focus greater attention to patient safety
FDA to increase attention safe use of drugs
Healthcare- to establish patient safety programs with defined executive responsibility
The Center for Patient Safety should be created within the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ).
The center would be a clearinghouse for states to share this mandatory information and expertise on reporting programs and to identify persistent safety issues.
Performance Std- obviously JCAHO has raised the bar with regards to patient safety by tying accreditation to the National Patient safety Goals. In addition, some states such as NY now require a certain number of ce credits for re-licensure of healthcare professionals
Within days of the IOM report, then President Clinton asked the Quality Interagency Coordination Task Force (QuIC) to study the report and make recommendations. Their recommendations were to :
Keep reporting within state systems
Research, evaluation and advisory components within federal agencies
Senators Kerry, Lieberman sponsored the Stop All Frequent Errors (SAFE) Act of 2000 that largely mirrored the IOM and QuIC reports calling for non-punitive error reduction system with adequate legal protection
15 states require mandatory reporting from hospitals of adverse events including NY, NJ, PennThe Center for Patient Safety should be created within the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ).
The center would be a clearinghouse for states to share this mandatory information and expertise on reporting programs and to identify persistent safety issues.
Performance Std- obviously JCAHO has raised the bar with regards to patient safety by tying accreditation to the National Patient safety Goals. In addition, some states such as NY now require a certain number of ce credits for re-licensure of healthcare professionals
Within days of the IOM report, then President Clinton asked the Quality Interagency Coordination Task Force (QuIC) to study the report and make recommendations. Their recommendations were to :
Keep reporting within state systems
Research, evaluation and advisory components within federal agencies
Senators Kerry, Lieberman sponsored the Stop All Frequent Errors (SAFE) Act of 2000 that largely mirrored the IOM and QuIC reports calling for non-punitive error reduction system with adequate legal protection
15 states require mandatory reporting from hospitals of adverse events including NY, NJ, Penn
7. Crossing the Quality Chasm Six Aims for the 21st Century
Pt are not injured by the care intended to help them
Effective- evidence based
Patient Centered
Timely
Efficient
Equitable Pt are not injured by the care intended-Patients should receive the same standard of care 24 X 7. Communication between healthcare providers must be improved and patients should be well informed.
Effective Evidenced based care where evidence exists guidelines and protocols should be initiated.
Patient Centered one size does not fit all and there must be a respect for patient preferences, needs and values
Timely- excessive waiting time can cause possible harm
Efficient- healthcare organizations should work hard on decrease the waste and re-work
Equitable- everyone receives the same quality of care.Pt are not injured by the care intended-Patients should receive the same standard of care 24 X 7. Communication between healthcare providers must be improved and patients should be well informed.
Effective Evidenced based care where evidence exists guidelines and protocols should be initiated.
Patient Centered one size does not fit all and there must be a respect for patient preferences, needs and values
Timely- excessive waiting time can cause possible harm
Efficient- healthcare organizations should work hard on decrease the waste and re-work
Equitable- everyone receives the same quality of care.
8. Crossing the Quality Chasm Ten Rules for care for 15 Priority Conditions
Accessible
Flexible
Informed pt decision making
Free access to info
Evidence based
Safe
Transparent
Anticipate Needs
Decreased waste
Collaboration Free access to information Why shouldnt I as a patient be able to see my own medical record?
Transparent- all providers should give patient information about their safety record
Anticipate Needs standard of care, but be able to customize when necessary.
The fifteen priority conditions include: cancer, diabetes, emphysema, high cholesterol, HIV/AIDS, hypertension, Ischemic heart disease, stroke, arthritis, asthma, gallbladder disease, stomach ulcers, back problems, alzheimers disease and depression/anxietyFree access to information Why shouldnt I as a patient be able to see my own medical record?
Transparent- all providers should give patient information about their safety record
Anticipate Needs standard of care, but be able to customize when necessary.
The fifteen priority conditions include: cancer, diabetes, emphysema, high cholesterol, HIV/AIDS, hypertension, Ischemic heart disease, stroke, arthritis, asthma, gallbladder disease, stomach ulcers, back problems, alzheimers disease and depression/anxiety
9. Keeping Patients Safe: Transforming the Work Environment of Nurses The latest report from the IOM addresses the following:
Work environment critical patient safety- specifically staffing & fatigue
Creating cultures of safety
Framework to construct safe work environments
The latest report from the IOM (publication should be out later this spring) looks at human factor information and something called a culture of safety. We will review this information later. The latest report from the IOM (publication should be out later this spring) looks at human factor information and something called a culture of safety. We will review this information later.
10. Additional Statistics US Death Certificates 1983 vs. 1993 2.57-fold increase from medication errors Phillips et al. 1998
Outpatient Deaths - during the same time period 8.48 fold increase
6.5% ADE per 100 non-obstetrical admission Bates et al.
Children Hospitals 4.5- 4.9 errors per 1,000 medication orders
Pediatric ICUs even higher at one error per 6.8 admissions
Massachusetts State Board of Pharmacy estimated that 2.4 million Rx are filled improperly (wrong drug/ wrong strength)
ADE associated with increase length of stay 1.9-4.6 days and up to $4,700 in cost
US Deaths 1983 2,876 people vs 1993 7,391 people died from medication errors. A 2.57 fold increase.
The likelihood of experiencing an adverse event increases 6 percent for each day of your hospital stay.US Deaths 1983 2,876 people vs 1993 7,391 people died from medication errors. A 2.57 fold increase.
The likelihood of experiencing an adverse event increases 6 percent for each day of your hospital stay.
11. Healthcare currently is borderline hazardous. If the studies are correct, they are the equivalent of 1 jumbo jet crashing every three days.
Note in the early 1980s mortality rates from anesthesiology were 2 deaths per 10,000 cases vs currently 1 death per 300,000 cases.
The likelihood of your being in a fatal crash is 1 in 8 million vs. 1 in 2 million during 1967-1976. You would have to fly for 438 years 24 hours a day 7 days a week before you would be involved in a fatal crash. Healthcare currently is borderline hazardous. If the studies are correct, they are the equivalent of 1 jumbo jet crashing every three days.
Note in the early 1980s mortality rates from anesthesiology were 2 deaths per 10,000 cases vs currently 1 death per 300,000 cases.
The likelihood of your being in a fatal crash is 1 in 8 million vs. 1 in 2 million during 1967-1976. You would have to fly for 438 years 24 hours a day 7 days a week before you would be involved in a fatal crash.
12. Being the best, is no guarantee that you will be safe from harm. You will recall this summer the tragic situation at Duke University Medical Center (#6 on this listing of best hospitals) in which a patient during a kidney transplant received the wrong blood transfusion. This past December our #1 Hospital Johns Hopkins also had a death attributed to the care that a small child received.Being the best, is no guarantee that you will be safe from harm. You will recall this summer the tragic situation at Duke University Medical Center (#6 on this listing of best hospitals) in which a patient during a kidney transplant received the wrong blood transfusion. This past December our #1 Hospital Johns Hopkins also had a death attributed to the care that a small child received.
13. Being the Best Doesnt Mean Mistakes Cant Happen
14. The Importance of Patient Safety The Consequences of a Mistake
Injury to the patient
Goes against everything we stand for
Professional, Legal & Regulatory consequences
For every error three other people are hurt- the patients family, the healthcare professional who was effected and.. the next patient if the system is not improved!
Video - Beyond Blame 9 minutes
15. Objective IISystem Approach to Errors Accidents almost never have a single cause
Latent Failures dormant factors and are properties of the system that call forth errors & failures on the part of human workers
Process of design
management
Resource allocation
16. Challenger Disaster Latent Failures- design flaw happened before the launch
Production Pressures leads to tragic decision to launch
Vaughan, D. Challenger Launch Decision: Risky Technology, Culture and Deviance at NASA If we were to review the challenger disaster we would find that design flaws created the latent failure that would show up eleven years later on the launch pad.
Production pressures led work groups and individuals to make decisions that they were uncomfortable with and ultimately resulted in tradegy.If we were to review the challenger disaster we would find that design flaws created the latent failure that would show up eleven years later on the launch pad.
Production pressures led work groups and individuals to make decisions that they were uncomfortable with and ultimately resulted in tradegy.
17. James Reasons Swiss Cheese Model
James Reason is a professor of psychology from the University of Manchester, Manchester England reason@psy.man.ac.uk
He has done extensive research into Human Errors and ReliabilityJames Reasons Swiss Cheese Model
James Reason is a professor of psychology from the University of Manchester, Manchester England reason@psy.man.ac.uk
He has done extensive research into Human Errors and Reliability
18. Healthcare- A Complex System Key Elements in a Medication System
Patient Information
Drug Information
Communication of Drug Information
Labeling, Packaging & Drug Nomenclature
Drug Storage, Stocking & Standardization
Drug Device Acquisition, Use & Monitoring
Environmental Stressors
Competency & Staff Education
Patient Education
Quality Processes & Risk Management
19. Element #1 Communication of Patient Information Legibility of Physician Orders including name of patient
Strategies include:
CPOE
Computer Generated patient labels
Pre-printed order sets
Order scanning capabilities-
22. Missing dose of Trazodone called for- You make the call
23. Element #4 Nomenclature Look-Alike/ Sound-AlikeLantus or Lente?
25. Objective IIIRegulatory & Consumer Response Safety Movements
Regulatory
JCAHO- National Patient Safety Goals
CMS- Quality Indicators
NJ Patient Safety Bill- reporting stds
Overtime mandates
FDA bar coding
Consumers
Leapfrog Group NJ Patient Safety Bill which would require hospitals and healthcare practitioners to report all serious medical errors and to encourage them to report near misses and mistakes that dont cause patient harm. Hospitals would be required to report all serious adverse events as defined by the law to an internal hospital committee and the state department of health. Information generated by a hospitals internal committee would be shielded from legal discovery except those that kill or seriously harm patients. There would be on line reporting capabilities.
CMS (Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services) has required quality performance data as part of the Medicare Prescription Drug Law. 10 Quality Measures are being monitored and hospitals not reporting will receive 0.4 percent less in Medicare re-imbursement.NJ Patient Safety Bill which would require hospitals and healthcare practitioners to report all serious medical errors and to encourage them to report near misses and mistakes that dont cause patient harm. Hospitals would be required to report all serious adverse events as defined by the law to an internal hospital committee and the state department of health. Information generated by a hospitals internal committee would be shielded from legal discovery except those that kill or seriously harm patients. There would be on line reporting capabilities.
CMS (Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services) has required quality performance data as part of the Medicare Prescription Drug Law. 10 Quality Measures are being monitored and hospitals not reporting will receive 0.4 percent less in Medicare re-imbursement.
26. Who Else Thinks Patient Safety Is Important?
27. The National Patient Safety Goals Improve Accuracy of Patient Identification
To use at least two patient identifiers neither can be the patient room number
Prior to the start of any surgical or invasive procedure- thou shall conduct a final verification process such as a time out to confirm the correct patient, procedure and site
Improve Effectiveness of Communication among caregivers
Implement a Read Back process for taking Verbal or Telephone Orders as well as Critical Test Result Process
Dangerous abbreviations JCAHO mandate by Jan 1st U,IU,QD,QOD,MS,MSO4,MgSO4,trailing zero, lack leading zero
28. THE ENRON CASE Could it be from bad communications?TELEPHONE ORDER- Importance of Read Back Was the call-
SHIP THE ENRON DOCUMENTS TO THE FEDS Or was the call-
RIP THE ENRON DOCUMENTS TO SHREDS
31. A few examples Blood Mix-up- Washington Post-
Simulation exercise
High Alert Medication Misadventures
Video
32. National Patient Safety Goals Continued Improve Safety of High- Alert Medications
Removal concentrated electrolytes
To standardize and limit the number of drug concentrations
Eliminate Wrong-site, Wrong-patient, Wrong Procedure Surgery
Preoperative verification process- i.e checklist
Surgical site marking & patient involvement
Improve the Safety of Infusion Pumps
Ensure free-flow protection intravenous pumps NYPORTS Occurrences (NY Patient Occurrence & Tracking System) By the way- New York State is way ahead of most states including NJ in terms of monitoring and reporting patient safety events. During the past year, a total of 88 incidents were reported. Interestingly, only 18 events occurred within the OR with the remaining 70 occurring due to procedures at the patient bedside.
NYPORTS Occurrences (NY Patient Occurrence & Tracking System) By the way- New York State is way ahead of most states including NJ in terms of monitoring and reporting patient safety events. During the past year, a total of 88 incidents were reported. Interestingly, only 18 events occurred within the OR with the remaining 70 occurring due to procedures at the patient bedside.
33. National Patient Safety Goals Continued Improve the effectiveness of clinical alarm systems
Implement regular preventive maintenance and testing of alarm systems
Assure that alarms are activated with appropriate settings and are sufficiently audible with respect to the distances and competing noise within the unit
Reduce the risk of health care acquired infections
Comply with current CDC hand-hygiene guidelines
Manage as sentinel events all ID cases of unanticipated death associated with noscomial infections
34. In response to the IOM Report, the Business Roundtable an association of CEOs of Fortune 500 companies formed the Leapfrog Group in 2000 in an effort to stimulate healthcare improvements. 3 Patient Safety Initiatives were identified:
Lack of incentives and organizational/ technical challenges have hindered hospital buy-in and fulfillment of the Leapfrog Standards. Many hospital disagree with the chosen standards, there are no re-imbursements and there is significant time to fill out the survey and collect data.In response to the IOM Report, the Business Roundtable an association of CEOs of Fortune 500 companies formed the Leapfrog Group in 2000 in an effort to stimulate healthcare improvements. 3 Patient Safety Initiatives were identified:
Lack of incentives and organizational/ technical challenges have hindered hospital buy-in and fulfillment of the Leapfrog Standards. Many hospital disagree with the chosen standards, there are no re-imbursements and there is significant time to fill out the survey and collect data.
35. CEOs also are concerned that we are pushing MDs too hard and fast on patient safety. MDs contend volume thresholds for high risk procedures is not as strong and a recent study has validated this. Also there is a national shortage of intensivists.CEOs also are concerned that we are pushing MDs too hard and fast on patient safety. MDs contend volume thresholds for high risk procedures is not as strong and a recent study has validated this. Also there is a national shortage of intensivists.
36. Leapfrog Market Survey Results Only 63% of hospitals have completed the Leapfrog Survey with a decline in subsequent survey compliance. Overall the state of NJ is even lower than this. Only 63% of hospitals have completed the Leapfrog Survey with a decline in subsequent survey compliance. Overall the state of NJ is even lower than this.
37. Harvard Executive Session on Medical Accident & Patient Safety Governing Board/ Leadership to declare patient safety a priority
Leadership- accepts responsibility, demonstrates accountability
Safety System- built on current knowledge (lessons learned)
Policies & Practices disclosure, near misses- to be made clear to staff
Building a Culture of Safety
38. How Healthcare is Responding to the Challenge HUMCs Approach/ Infrastructure Patient Safety Steering Committee Even when hospital view patient safety as a requirement, they lack organizational capacity; including time, money, managerial & clinical leadership and expertise. At HUMC we developed a Patient Safety Steering Committee with the following reporting structure.Even when hospital view patient safety as a requirement, they lack organizational capacity; including time, money, managerial & clinical leadership and expertise. At HUMC we developed a Patient Safety Steering Committee with the following reporting structure.
39. We operate within the PI structure at Hackensack University Medical Center. Here you can see that the Medication Safety Committee reports up through the Performance Improvement Coordinating Committee to the Quality Council. We also report to the P&T Committee up to the Medical Board as well as to Administrative Operations. We operate within the PI structure at Hackensack University Medical Center. Here you can see that the Medication Safety Committee reports up through the Performance Improvement Coordinating Committee to the Quality Council. We also report to the P&T Committee up to the Medical Board as well as to Administrative Operations.
40. Does your Hospital have a Patient Safety Plan? Leadership Driven- Coordinated & Integrated Effort -purpose improve patient safety & reduce risk
Objectives
Recognize Patient Safety as Everyones Job Responsibility
Provide Education on Patient Safety- Competency
Encourage all staff in the recognition and reporting process
Understand the role of Human Factors in Patient Safety
Education and Deployment of FMEA Proactive Process Improvement Efforts- This years Topic Is?
Enforce a Culture of Safety -Minimize blame- Annual Survey
Encourage Organizational Learning about Medical Errors
41. Historical Perspective- Strong Leadership Involvement Med Safety Committee established-1997
First Educational Program on Med Safety Jan 1998
Institute Safe Medication Practices (ISMP)- 3 day audit of our systems/ processes 1998
Collaborative Work starting in 2000 thru today
Institute for Healthcare Improvement Quantum Leaps in Patient Safety
FMEA, Culture of Safety, Reconciliation- Anticoagulation & Oncology
Vermont Oxford- Pediatrics/ Neonatology
Pursuing Perfection RWJ Project
Organizational Goal Leadership Recognition
Administrative Safety Rounds/ Safety Briefings Newsletter
Make Safety a Clinical Organizational Measure- Increase Reporting by 20% in 2002 & Improve Level of Patient Harm in 2003 & 2004
National Patient Safety Goals in 2004
Establish a Medication Safety Officer
Medication Safety ID High Risk Process FMEA Work The LEADERSHIP of Hackensack University Medical Center has always taken a very proactive approach toward Patient Safety.
Since 1997 we have had a very active Medication Safety Committee. A year and one half before the IOM Report (To Err is Human), Hackensack was already reviewing our systems pro-actively with the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP). They conducted a 3 day audit of our medication systems and made many outstanding recommendations that have been implemented by our Medication Safety Team from that review.
We have incorporated patient safety throughout our Mission, Values and Core Strategies.
This year we have set as an organization goal to increase the number of voluntary reported medication errors by 20%. Pat Santaniello will review more specific information with you.
Medication Safety has been identified as an organizational priority and you will hear more information on our use of FMEA to improve that process.
We have been involved in various Collaboratives (IHI Quantum Leaps in Medication safety, the Vermont Oxford pediatric initiative and the RWJ grant.
The LEADERSHIP of Hackensack University Medical Center has always taken a very proactive approach toward Patient Safety.
Since 1997 we have had a very active Medication Safety Committee. A year and one half before the IOM Report (To Err is Human), Hackensack was already reviewing our systems pro-actively with the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP). They conducted a 3 day audit of our medication systems and made many outstanding recommendations that have been implemented by our Medication Safety Team from that review.
We have incorporated patient safety throughout our Mission, Values and Core Strategies.
This year we have set as an organization goal to increase the number of voluntary reported medication errors by 20%. Pat Santaniello will review more specific information with you.
Medication Safety has been identified as an organizational priority and you will hear more information on our use of FMEA to improve that process.
We have been involved in various Collaboratives (IHI Quantum Leaps in Medication safety, the Vermont Oxford pediatric initiative and the RWJ grant.
42. Objective IVWhat exactly is a Safety Culture? Strategic Emphasis on Patient Safety
Blame- Free environment
Shared accountability
Desire to learn and change Systems that defy errors
Proactive focus
Teamwork
Community involvement
Safety measurements Strategic Emphasis- leadership driven, middle managers convey culture to front line staff, message supported by organizational behavior that re-enforces safety as a priority and permeates the entire hospital. Strategic plan with long-term goals and change projects to improve safety.
Blame free- no fear of retribution or embarrassment for raising cocerns or reporting errors, management style for dealing with error, use of storytelling to teach people about errors, administrative safety rounding
Shared accountability based upon realistic expectations (no one is perfect) everyone is responsible for improving safety systems- it begins at orientation. That safety is job one.
Desire to learn and change- error detection and reporting is key to understanding what went wrong and to recommend error reduction strategies. Learning from mistakes are key
Systems that defy errors- forcing functions, technology, warnings, constraints, redundancies
Proactive focus- FMEA (dont wait for mistakes to happen)
Teamwork all people are empowered to correct safety hazards as they are identified.
Community Involvement build relationships with your patients and the media
Safety Measurements- you cant improve anything if you are not measuring it.
Strategic Emphasis- leadership driven, middle managers convey culture to front line staff, message supported by organizational behavior that re-enforces safety as a priority and permeates the entire hospital. Strategic plan with long-term goals and change projects to improve safety.
Blame free- no fear of retribution or embarrassment for raising cocerns or reporting errors, management style for dealing with error, use of storytelling to teach people about errors, administrative safety rounding
Shared accountability based upon realistic expectations (no one is perfect) everyone is responsible for improving safety systems- it begins at orientation. That safety is job one.
Desire to learn and change- error detection and reporting is key to understanding what went wrong and to recommend error reduction strategies. Learning from mistakes are key
Systems that defy errors- forcing functions, technology, warnings, constraints, redundancies
Proactive focus- FMEA (dont wait for mistakes to happen)
Teamwork all people are empowered to correct safety hazards as they are identified.
Community Involvement build relationships with your patients and the media
Safety Measurements- you cant improve anything if you are not measuring it.
43. How Healthcare is Responding to the Challenge/ HUMCs Approach CULTURE OF SAFETY Collaborative Work with Leadership Groups ISMP/ IHI/ RWJ
Culture of Safety Survey annual
Continue to Measure to support increasing/improving system of voluntary reporting-
Safety Rounds- senior administrative interdisciplinary rounds to patient care units results communicated
Communication Safety newsletters
SAFETY BRIEFINGS & ISMP NEWSLETTER
Patient Involvement Speak Up for Safety Campaign- JCAHO Publication for patients
Dedicate Resources for Patient Safety- Medication Safety Officer
An effective Patient Safety Program cannot exist without optimal reporting of safety related medical events. All personnel are required to report suspected and identified medical/health errors. The reporting of the suspected error will not result in an adverse employment action, although the underlying medical/health error may lead to appropriate disciplinary action. Failure to report such suspected errors shall itself be grounds for disciplinary action up to and including separation of employment. This organization supports the concept that events occur due to a breakdown in systems and processes, and will focus on improving systems and processes and adopt the use of James Reasons Unsafe Acts Alogrithm ( attached) to assist in the determination of Blamelessness Vs Culpability. (LD.3.4.1)
Patient dsafety Plan
An effective Patient Safety Program cannot exist without optimal reporting of safety related medical events. All personnel are required to report suspected and identified medical/health errors. The reporting of the suspected error will not result in an adverse employment action, although the underlying medical/health error may lead to appropriate disciplinary action. Failure to report such suspected errors shall itself be grounds for disciplinary action up to and including separation of employment. This organization supports the concept that events occur due to a breakdown in systems and processes, and will focus on improving systems and processes and adopt the use of James Reasons Unsafe Acts Alogrithm ( attached) to assist in the determination of Blamelessness Vs Culpability. (LD.3.4.1)
Patient dsafety Plan
44. Administrative Safety Rounds Sample Questions
Can you think of any events that have resulted in prolonged hospitalization for a pt.
Have there been any near misses that almost caused pt harm but didnt?
Have we harmed anyone recently
What aspects of the environment are likely to lead to the next patient being harmed?
Can you think of a way in which the system or environment fails you on a consistent basis. Some sample questions we ask during our weekly rounding.Some sample questions we ask during our weekly rounding.
45. Culture of Safety Survey Results August 2003 QUESTIONS
My supervisor listens to me and cares about my concern.
My suggestions about safety would be acted upon if I expressed them to management.
Management will never compromise safety concerns for productivity.
I am encouraged by my supervisors and co-workers to report any unsafe conditions that I observe.
I know the proper channels to report my safety concerns.
I am satisfied with availability of clinical leadership (MD, RN, RP).
Leadership is driving us to be a safety centered institution.
I am aware that patient safety has become a major area for improvement in my institution.
I believe that most adverse events occur as a result of multiple small failures, and are not attributable to one individual's actions.
46. People Unsafe acts- aberrant mental processes forgetfulness, inattention, poor motivation, carelessness, negligence and recklessness NOTE: NJ Star Ledger Advertisement this weekend.
Countermeasures poster campaigns that appeal to their sense of fear, disciplinary measures, threats of litigation, writing another procedure
Errors are seen as consequences rather than causes, having their origins not so much in human nature as in upstream systemic factors such as error traps in the workplace and organizational processes that give rise to them.
Countermeasure- based upon assumption that though we cannot change the human condition, we can change the conditions under which humans work. A central idea is that of system defenses. When an error occurs, the important issue is not who blundered but how and why the defenses failed.
People Unsafe acts- aberrant mental processes forgetfulness, inattention, poor motivation, carelessness, negligence and recklessness NOTE: NJ Star Ledger Advertisement this weekend.
Countermeasures poster campaigns that appeal to their sense of fear, disciplinary measures, threats of litigation, writing another procedure
Errors are seen as consequences rather than causes, having their origins not so much in human nature as in upstream systemic factors such as error traps in the workplace and organizational processes that give rise to them.
Countermeasure- based upon assumption that though we cannot change the human condition, we can change the conditions under which humans work. A central idea is that of system defenses. When an error occurs, the important issue is not who blundered but how and why the defenses failed.
47. Objective VImplementing a Patient Safety Program Multiple Approaches
Safety Planning
Measurement ,Reporting & Performance Improvement
Its everyones responsibility including the patient
Systems Improvement
Training/ Education/ Communication Patient Safety
Technology
48. Healthcare is a Complex Process In the next section we will be looking at what things you can do at your institutions that can be used to implement a Patient Safety Program from a medication perspective. For each of these boxes, I have provided you with some suggestions about transforming your organizations.
In the next section we will be looking at what things you can do at your institutions that can be used to implement a Patient Safety Program from a medication perspective. For each of these boxes, I have provided you with some suggestions about transforming your organizations.
49. Selection, Procurement & Storage Strategies Drugs are evaluated for safety considerations even before going to P&T & Medical Board
Look-A-Like Medication Storage is constantly being evaluated.
50. Drug Storage, Stocking & Standardization Strategies Include:
Centralized IV Admixture Service
Automated technology including bar coding for QA process
Pharmacy only access to concentrated electrolytes
Smart Infusion Pumps
54. Ordering & Transcribing Strategies Prescribing-
Computerized Physician Order Entry
Medication Administration Record Documentation
Pre-Printed Order sets
Emergency Drug Administration Charts
55. CPOE- Medication Selection Screen
56. CPOE -Medication Ordering
57. eMAR WorklistAll Scheduled meds to be given 7AM-3:30 PM on 11/19/03
58. Preparing & Dispensing AUTOMATION STRATEGY
Pharmacy Robotic Dispensing
In support of Bar Coding effort
59. Administration Smart Pumps
Early studies of point-of-care systems bar code technology have shown a 65- to 86- percent decrease in medication errors.
60. The Medley Smart Pump System The MEDLEY System is much more than just an infusion device. It has been designed to have power and communications capability, as well as the ability to support different medication therapies.
The MEDLEY System along with the Guardrails Software integrates drug infusion, patient monitoring and information management in one modular, easy to use platform at the patients bedside.
The modular nature of this system allows you to standardize programming and communications with different types of devices. Even more importantly, this platform will allow you to extend the benefits of the Guardrails Software to syringe and PCA applications. The MEDLEY System is much more than just an infusion device. It has been designed to have power and communications capability, as well as the ability to support different medication therapies.
The MEDLEY System along with the Guardrails Software integrates drug infusion, patient monitoring and information management in one modular, easy to use platform at the patients bedside.
The modular nature of this system allows you to standardize programming and communications with different types of devices. Even more importantly, this platform will allow you to extend the benefits of the Guardrails Software to syringe and PCA applications.
61. How Guardrails Software Can Change Outcomes
Guardrails could have protected against these highly publicized preventable adverse drug events with infusion programming errors
Cost to prevent these errors is minimal in comparison to the consequences, evidence that error prevention software will likely become a standard of care for infusion devices
Guardrails could have protected against these highly publicized preventable adverse drug events with infusion programming errors
Cost to prevent these errors is minimal in comparison to the consequences, evidence that error prevention software will likely become a standard of care for infusion devices
62. Monitoring of Patient Care Use of Nomograms to guide therapy
Clinical Specialists such as PharmDs & APNs (pharmacokinetics)
Interdisciplinary Care Rounds When Clinical Pharmacists Round Lucian Leape found that in ICUs preventable ADE significantly lowered by 72% from 12.4 ADE/ 1,000 patient days to 3.5 ADE/1,000 patient days.
At the Henry Ford Hospital- on general medical units ADE were lowered by 78% from 26.5 ADE to 5.7 ADE/ 1,000 patient daysWhen Clinical Pharmacists Round Lucian Leape found that in ICUs preventable ADE significantly lowered by 72% from 12.4 ADE/ 1,000 patient days to 3.5 ADE/1,000 patient days.
At the Henry Ford Hospital- on general medical units ADE were lowered by 78% from 26.5 ADE to 5.7 ADE/ 1,000 patient days
63. Objective VISome Tools & Resource Suggestions Members of the Patient Safety Steering Committee
Deployment of Patient Safety Training Courses
Management Certification
National Patient Safety Goals
Performance Improvement Monitoring
Administrative Safety Rounds
Immediately make an impression that Safety is a Leadership Priority
Newsletters
ISMP
Hospital Specific Safety Newsletters
64. Human Factors Definition Human Factors- is a discipline devoted to studying the interaction of people and equipment and other variables that affect the outcome of the contact. James Reason regarding as having been responsible for this new science. There are five dimensions to Human Factors Engineering:
Design of equipment and tools
Design of the task itself
Environmental conditions of work
The training and education of the staff
The selection of employees. Hospitals typically concentrate on the last two dimensions.
James Reasons was an organizational psychologist.James Reason regarding as having been responsible for this new science. There are five dimensions to Human Factors Engineering:
Design of equipment and tools
Design of the task itself
Environmental conditions of work
The training and education of the staff
The selection of employees. Hospitals typically concentrate on the last two dimensions.
James Reasons was an organizational psychologist.
65. Human Factor- System Levels Point of Care Ergonomics
Physical design of equipment & immediate environment
Point of Care Environment
Physical surrounds of the unit
Individual Human Factors
Personal factors that influence system reliability (fatigue)
Team & Group Factors
Team performance elements such as communication & hierarchy
Organization & Management Factors
Policies and practices of the organization
66. Human Factors & Healthcare The FDAs Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH) recognize the need for human factors knowledge in healthcare.
They estimate that 1/3 of incident reports they receive involve equipment use error a term referring to flawed design
67. How Reliably do we make errors? General Human Error of Commission 0.003
misreading a label
General Error of Omission 0.01
failure to turn off a switch
Simple arithmetic calculation error 0.03
with rechecking but not rewriting the #s
Transposition error 0.0006
crossing wires, mixing drug dosages
Errors under high stress in danger 0.25
*This assumes no undue time pressure or stress
Salvendy Compendium of Human Factors Cognitive Psychology study of human response in complex demanding environments. Errors are NOT simply random events but occur in predictable patients and circumstances (stress and fatigue)Cognitive Psychology study of human response in complex demanding environments. Errors are NOT simply random events but occur in predictable patients and circumstances (stress and fatigue)
68. The Role of Complexity in Errors Probability of Performing Perfectly: Cognitive Psychology Study of human response in complex demanding environments
Errors are NOT simply random events but occur in predictable patterns & circumstances (stress & fatigue)
Cognitive Psychology Study of human response in complex demanding environments
Errors are NOT simply random events but occur in predictable patterns & circumstances (stress & fatigue)
Cognitive Psychology Study of human response in complex demanding environments
Errors are NOT simply random events but occur in predictable patterns & circumstances (stress & fatigue)
Cognitive Psychology Study of human response in complex demanding environments
Errors are NOT simply random events but occur in predictable patterns & circumstances (stress & fatigue)
69. Healthcare- Not Very Reliable Barriers to Reliability
High Premium placed on medical autonomy and perfection.
Lack of professional cooperation & effective communications.
Mistakes treated as personal & professional failure.
Teamwork & Collaboration in problem solving- poor.
Accepting the occurrence of error as an opportunity to learn & improve reliability. High Reliability Organizations (US Navy Nuclear aircraft carriers, Nuclear power plants and air traffic control centers) have the following characteristics:
They are complex, internally dynamic and intermittently, intensely interactive
They performed exacting tasks under considerable time pressure
They had carried out these demanding activities with low incident rates and an almost complete absence of catastrophic failures over several years.
These organizations share important characteristics with healthcare institutions.
High Reliability Organizations (US Navy Nuclear aircraft carriers, Nuclear power plants and air traffic control centers) have the following characteristics:
They are complex, internally dynamic and intermittently, intensely interactive
They performed exacting tasks under considerable time pressure
They had carried out these demanding activities with low incident rates and an almost complete absence of catastrophic failures over several years.
These organizations share important characteristics with healthcare institutions.
70. Reliability in Healthcare Key Elements
71. Rank Order of Error Reduction Strategies Forcing Functions & Constraints
Automation & Computerization
Standardization & Protocols
Checklists & Double Check Systems
Rules & Policies
Education & Information
Be more careful, be vigilant
72. What happens to my Incident Report? Multi-Disciplinary Group Review
Identification of Process Stage Failure
Type of Error (wrong dose, pt, route)
Severity Rating NCC MERP system- Level of Harm identified
Type of Medication
73. Medication Error Reporting System
74. Medication Errors
75. The average hospital in this group reports about 400 errors each year. Do you know what your hospital number is?The average hospital in this group reports about 400 errors each year. Do you know what your hospital number is?
76. Top 50 Drug Products* Associated with Medication Errors
78. Important Policies & Procedures Administrative Manual
Patient Safety Plan
Sentinel Event Policy & Procedure
Unanticipated Outcome Disclosure
Clinical Alarms
Reporting Critical Test Values
Verbal/ Telephone Orders
Safety Manual
Safety Management Plan
79. Unanticipated Outcome Definition- a result that differs significantly from what was anticipated to be the result of a treatment or procedure.
80. Sentinel Event Policy/ Procedure Definition an unexpected occurrence, involving death or serious physical or psychological injury or risk thereof.
Examples
Suicide of a patient in a hospital setting
Infant abduction
Rate
Hemolytic transfusion reaction
Wrong site surgery
Medication Error- causing death or permanent inj.
81. What should we do if there is a mistake? Disclosure CON
Does the patient really want to know
Undermines trust in MD/ Hospital
Arent we all human?
Unanticipated outcome
How severe was the error? Ability to conceal PRO
The Golden Rule- do onto others etc.
Watergate syndrome
Right to Know
Its your body
Bear the burden of consequences
Reality vs. The Truth
82. Principles of Communication Caregivers have a duty to accurately and completely inform pt timely
Provide info pt/ next of kin that will produce an understanding of the nature and significance of the event
Caregiver- to provide as accurate info as available at the time
Attending MD- primary responsibility to fully & accurately explain nature/ consequences
83. Parts of a FMEA format & what they mean Section I Process- This is identified as a major step of each workflow. (Example Prescribing of Medications)
Failure Mode- This would be the next level of the major process step. (Example within prescribing the physician would need the proper information about the patient).
Cause of Failure- Here is where you come up with experience about what could go wrong (Example patient information incorrect information is collected about a patient allergy).
84. Parts of a FMEA format & what they mean Section II Scoring Likelihood of Occurrence- Identify how often a process breaks (4 daily, 3 monthly, 2 weekly, 1 once a year)
Effect & Severity (Criticality) if Failure Occurs- Identify the consequences if that error were to occur
Probability of Detection- Identify the ability for someone to easily find an error should it occur. Here scoring is 1-3 with the following definitions: 1 The process cannot continue without this info, 2 the process could continue but info would need to be obtained, 3 there is a low probability of detection such that no information is available for other depts to enable discoverability
85. FMEA Methodology We use the Institute for Healthcare Improvements Methodology for Failure Mode and Effects Analysis.
I have included an example of how this is done for your review. Talk through slide info.We use the Institute for Healthcare Improvements Methodology for Failure Mode and Effects Analysis.
I have included an example of how this is done for your review. Talk through slide info.
86. Root Cause Analysis
87. Medical Error Simulation Case Presentation
88. Thank You I hope that you found the presentation to have met your expectations!!!!!!