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Issues of Patient Safety QUB Third Year Introductory Week

Issues of Patient Safety QUB Third Year Introductory Week. Dr Noeleen Devaney Patient Safety Lead,South Eastern Trust Director,N Ireland CSCG Support Team. The Problem …. Healthcare is not as safe as it should or could be despite the best intentions of a dedicated and highly skilled workforce

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Issues of Patient Safety QUB Third Year Introductory Week

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  1. Issues of Patient SafetyQUB Third Year Introductory Week Dr Noeleen Devaney Patient Safety Lead,South Eastern Trust Director,N Ireland CSCG Support Team

  2. The Problem…. • Healthcare is not as safe as it should or could be despite the best intentions of a dedicated and highly skilled workforce • Unintended harm and unnecessary deaths are the all too frequent outcome of pressurized healthcare systems • 30-40% of patients do not receive care in line with current scientific evidence • 20% or more of care provided is eithernot needed or potentially harmful

  3. Patient Safety Incident • Any unintended or unexpected incident/s that could or did lead to harm for one or more patients

  4. Cost of Adverse Events • Patients and families • Healthcare staff -the second victims • Financial-additional hospital stays alone estimated to cost £2000m annually in UK

  5. The perception… • If a doctor is highly trained and tries hard enough he/she will not make errors • Errors and mistakes equate with personal failure and incompetence

  6. Blame & Punish?

  7. the perfection myth • if we try hard enough we will not make any errors • the punishment myth • if we punish people when they make errors they will make fewer of them

  8. The reality… • Human beings carrying out complex and risky procedures in our time pressurized healthcare organisations will make errors • 95% of errors that cause harm involve conscientious competent individuals trying hard to achieve a desired outcome –only 5% of harm is caused by incompetence or poorly intended care • errors/mistakes do not imply personal failure or incompetence

  9. What is Human Error? ‘We all make errors - irrespective of how much training and experience we possess, or how motivated we are to do it right’ (in Reducing error and influencing behaviour - HSG48)

  10. We all make mistakes

  11. Or support & learn?

  12. Person v System Approach • Person approach- focuses on the unsafe act, ‘name and shame’ individuals • System approach- errors seen as consequence of unsafe systems; aim is to build defences and safeguards- robust systems that protect patients from harm • Just culture –balanced approach, clarification of accountability

  13. PARIS IN THE THE SPRING from R Resar, Institute for Healthcare Improvement

  14. Factors Contributing to Human Error • Environmental Factors • Light • Noise and Vibration- Alarms! • Temperature • Humidity • Equipment layout and design • Physical environment

  15. Factors Contributing to Human Error • Some examples of personal factors • Fatigue • Stress • Workload • Distraction • Drugs/ Alcohol • Hypoglycaemia • Hypovolaemia

  16. Why things go wrong • Failure to recognise • Failure to rescue • Failure to plan • Failure to communicate • Variation in medical practice (ie inappropriate variation not determined by patient need)

  17. Common types of Medical Error • Medication error –the most common single preventable cause of patient injury • Missed and delayed diagnosis –eg failure to recognise a patient is seriously ill • Perioperative –eg needless infection, wrong site, wrong side, wrong patient, lack of DVT prophylaxis

  18. Key risk areas for junior doctors (examples) • Errors in patient identification, clinical details on request forms, mislabelled samples – can lead to misdiagnosis, incorrect treatment, unnecessary delay or even transfusion error • Failure to minimise HAI –handwashing • Incorrect drug prescription including transcribing errors • Failure to diagnose correctly and delay in diagnosis

  19. Improving Patient Safety • Minimise errors/prevent adverse events • Detect those that occur and mitigate before they cause harm ( prevent adverse event) • Make any adverse events visible- speak up • Mitigate against the effects when adverse events occur • Organisations need an explicit focus on a Safety Environment

  20. Fundamental Components of a Safety Environment • Effective teamwork and collaboration between disciplines • Structured systems • Open communication surrounding errors and shared learning • Full patient involvement

  21. Structured systems • Help ensure protection against error • Respect for these systems is crucial • Low tech systems include written guidelines, protocols, standardised forms for completion, reminders, visual prompts • High tech systems include infusion pumps, bar coding, computerised medication systems • Anaesthetics has highly standardised systems and it is no coincidence that anaesthetics isthe safest healthcare specialty

  22. Standardisation • Reduces unacceptable variation • Reduces potential for error • Makes care safer • Examples in use in N Ireland include Medication on Admission Reconciliation Form, Care Pathways, EWS chart, Communication tools such as SBAR, Prevention of DVT proforma, Reducing Surgical Site Infection documentation etc etc

  23. Medication Reconciliation • Medication errors are the single most common cause of harm in any hospital setting • 46% of all medication errors occur at transition points • Medication reconciliation ensures that patients receive all intended and no unintended medications following transitions in care locations • Medication on admission (MOA) reconciliation form completed on admission

  24. Early Warning Score chart • Records standard patient observations • Generates an “at risk score” • Indicates timescale for medical review • Nurse may utilise a specific communication tool –SBAR-when seeking medical assistance

  25. Medical notes, care pathway, prescribed forms- write clearly! Listen to patients/relatives Multidisciplinary team General Practitioner Handovers Patient safety concerns-speak up! Incident reporting (near misses as well as adverse events) Ask for help sooner rather than later –don’t take risks by leaving it too late Communication for junior doctors

  26. SBAR • Situation- what is happening at present time • Background- circumstances leading up to situation • Assessment- what I think the problem is • Recommendation- what I think should be done to correct the problem

  27. Ask Me 3 • Quick effective communication tool • Three simple but essential questions that patients should be encouraged to ask in every health care interaction • What is my main problem? • What do I need to do? • Why is it important for me to do this?

  28. Healthcare Associated Infection • Major cause of needless morbidity and mortality • MRSA particularly problematic and C difficile increasing • By far the principal mode of spread is via the contaminated hands of caregivers • Even casual contact with the infected patient or their immediate environment can contaminate the caregivers hands –MRSA can survive for hours/days on table tops, bedrails etc • Gloves provide some protection but hands are often contaminated in the process of removing gloves

  29. Hand Hygiene • Of pivotal importance in preventing the transmission of MRSA from patient to patient, even if the patient is on contact/barrier precautions and gloves are worn • Alcohol hand rubs rapidly kill bacteria including MRSA but have no effect on C Difficle • Personal equipment such as stethoscopes, if inadequately disinfected, can transmit MRSA • Appropriate technique necessary

  30. HEALTHCARE SYSTEMS The Real World: Swiss Cheese

  31. DANGER Some 'holes' due to active failures Defences in depth Other 'holes' due to latent conditions From Reason 1997

  32. A Tale of Two Cheeses Emmental Cheese Havarti Cheese Source: Larry Veltman, M.D. Chairman, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Providence St. Vincent Medical Center, Portland, Oregon

  33. Clinical and Social Care Governance • The framework through which HPSS organisations are accountable for continuously improving the quality of their services and safeguarding high standards of care • Students need to understand the key components of Clinical and Social Care Governance (CSCG)

  34. Key components of CSCG-1 • Recognition of the crucial role of patient involvement in delivering a safe, high quality service • The importance of evidence-based care in reducing unacceptable variation in health care • The necessity to keep up to date • Individual accountability and “speaking up” as part of a just culture • The importance of risk assessment and risk management including adverse incident/near miss reporting andcomplaints management

  35. Key components of CSCG-2 • The imperative of learning lessons from what has gone wrong and addressing deficiencies so as to prevent reoccurrence • The principles of audit and the necessity to “close the loop” (real time data best) • Appraisal and professional regulation

  36. Safer Patients Initiative • Downe and Lagan Valley Hospitals in Phase 1 (2004-2006) • RVH/ Mater and Antrim Area/Causeway hospitals in Phase 2 (2006- • Change package addressing 5 clinical areas • Medicines Management • Infection Prevention and Control • Peri-operative Care • Critical Care • Care on General Wards • Utilise improvement science andstructured systems that minimize avoidable harm and take account of human factors

  37. Sources of information Institute for Healthcare Improvement website: www.ihi.org National Patient Safety Agency website: www.npsa.nhs.uk Noeleen.Devaney@setrust.hscni.net

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