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Land Mines in Health Care. Presented by Keith Bonsall Director, Halcyon Management Services Specialists in Hospital Management. To Provide Care to a Patient one needs the following basics………. Oxygen Suction Defibrillator Medical devices e.g. intubation
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Land Mines in Health Care Presented by Keith Bonsall Director, Halcyon Management Services Specialists in Hospital Management
To Provide Care to a Patient one needs the following basics……….. • Oxygen • Suction • Defibrillator • Medical devices e.g. intubation • Measuring devices e.g. vital signs monitors • Diagnostic services e.g. Radiology and pathology • Medication • Dressings and other surgical devices
But to ensure the appropriate application of these “tools” one needs…… • Competent doctors • Competent nurses • Competent support staff These 3 critical components make up the ultimate team in ensuring the wellbeing and life of a patient!
Therefore the Landmines!!! • Doctors lacking in diagnostic skills • Nurses lacking in clinical skills • Support staff not understanding their role in the patient care process
These Landmines Leads to…………… • Poor quality of care • Adverse advents • High risk to patient • Higher cost of care
Focus on Nurses • Consensus on shortage of resources • Supply and demand economics are forcing increase in costs • Constant cry from Nursing that there is a shortage on the Ward or in Theatre • Limited job satisfaction • Nursing becomes “just a job”!
What Does a Nurse Do? • Studies conducted in USA have shown that between 30 – 40% of a Ward nurses time is spent on non-nursing duties! • Ordering stock • Counting stock • Running to get script from pharmacy • Administration duties • Telephone usage • Walking between sluice, stock, linen and equipment rooms
Management’s Objective : Prevent the Landmines • To keep the nurse at the bedside • Applying her/his knowledge and qualification, skills and experience in providing the best nursing care • Eliminate, or at least reduce, adverse events and therefore risk to patient • Generally reduce exposure to any risk (patient, staff, public, financial loss, fire and safety etc) • Training, training, training!
Structural Limitations • Policies, protocols or SOP’s that are out of date and not practical • Scope of practice that may limit flexibility to categories of staff • Procedures and processes that are not efficient e.g. too much paper or too many levels of communication • Low performing people that are not counseled, guided or trained to produce more effectively • No Risk Management structure in place
Definition of Risk • “A risk of danger, a possibility of incurring loss or misfortune” • “Risk is the chance of something happening that will have an impact upon the achievement of objectives……” • “An adverse event that impacts negatively on the outcome of patient”
Some Core Sources of Land Mines • Communication – between all persons and stakeholders in the care delivery process • Finances – relating to revenue, costs, cash flow, working capital, funding and controls • Information management – data accuracy, timeousness, validity, accessibility • Quality assurance – customer satisfaction levels, clinical outcomes, infection rates, death rates • Coordination – leadership, management styles, attention to detail, processes, systems, integration of multi-functional departments
Land Mine Categories : How the Hospital Functions (The Drivers) • What physically happens (process and outcomes) • Who people interact with • The degree to which customers (patients) interact with staff • The skill level required to provide the services within the function • The tools and equipment required to provide the services • The physical working environment • The general external environment that impacts on that function • The laws and regulations that may govern that function
Land Mine Areas • Nursing • Skill, competence and qualification of Nurses • Compliance with standard operating procedures (SOP’s) • Complying with infection control procedures • Needle stick injuries • Complying with doctors orders exactly as prescribed • Appropriate supervision, management and support • Regular training in clinical techniques and updating nursing practices • Regular training in improving interpersonal relationships
7 Effective Management Responsibilities that will Reduce Landmines and Their Impact • Credentialing of medical staff – Doctors and Nurses • Incident monitoring and tracking • Complaints monitoring and tracking • Infection control • Documentation in the medical record • Support by management to ensure that nurses are spending at least 90% of their time at the bedside • Managing compliance with SOP’s
Summary • “Doctors cure, Nurses care” – ensure that this team is optimally functional • “First, do no harm” – ensure that attitude of staff towards patients (and colleagues) is positive and appropriate • Doctors and Nurses are at the forefront in the delivery of quality patient care – ensure that all supporting infrastructures are designed to achieve this consistently
Elimination of Landmines will: • improve quality of care • improve staff satisfaction • improve clinical outcomes • reduce cost of care
The Dynamics of Control and Influence The Management of Outcomes Through the 2 Drivers: The Hospital and Doctor
What Influence Does Hospital Management Have Over Key Operational Factors?