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Safety Management Systems & Reliability

Safety Management Systems & Reliability. Chris W. Hayes, MD CPSOC April 12, 2011. Overview. How safe is healthcare? What is Safety Management System System defences “Swiss Cheese” model Reliability Group exercise Summary. How Safe is Healthcare?. How Safe is Healthcare?.

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Safety Management Systems & Reliability

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  1. Safety Management Systems &Reliability Chris W. Hayes, MD CPSOC April 12, 2011

  2. Overview • How safe is healthcare? • What is Safety Management System • System defences • “Swiss Cheese” model • Reliability • Group exercise • Summary

  3. How Safe is Healthcare?

  4. How Safe is Healthcare? • Canadian Adverse Events Study • 7.5% of admission suffer an AE • 9250 to 23750 preventable deaths/yr • Death from AE in 1/165 admissions Baker R. The Canadian Adverse Events Study. CMAJ 2001.

  5. How Safe is Healthcare? HealthCare

  6. Why Is This So? “Medicine used to be simple, ineffective and relatively safe. Now it is complex, effective and potentially dangerous.” Sir Cyril Chantler Chairman, King’s Fund

  7. Why Is This So? • Clinical medicine has become extremely complex: • Increased patient volume, acuity • Growing therapeutic options • Expanding knowledge, evidence • Surprises, uncertainty • Many sources of (incomplete) information • Interruptions and multitasking

  8. Why Is This So? AND… • Safe and quality outcomes (for the most part) dependent on healthcare providers [humans] • Is that a problem?

  9. Why Is This So? Gets worse with: -fatigue -stress -lack of knowledge -lack of confidence -lack of supportive workenvironment • Compassionate / caring

  10. Where Should We Be? HealthCare Blood Transfusion Anesthesia

  11. How Do We Get There? • Healthcare needs to become more like an ultra-safe industry • Learn from other ultra-safe industries • Learn from components of medicine that have achieved high degree of safety • Develop a strong Culture of Safety

  12. Safety Management Systems? • Safety Management System, SMS • Taken from ultra-safe, HROs • An organizational approach to safety • Focuses on the system not the person A systematic, explicit and comprehensive process for managing safety risks

  13. Safety Management Systems? • SMS origins from aviation industry • In response to major airline disasters in the 1960’s • Initial focus on “safety system” • Made department / individuals responsible for safety

  14. Safety Management Systems?

  15. Safety Management Systems? • SMS origins from aviation industry • In response to major airline disasters in the 1960’s • Initial focus on “safety system” • Made department / individuals responsible for safety • Realization that to achieve full scale safety goals need whole organization approach

  16. Safety Management Systems? • Main objectives: • Detecting and understanding the hazards and risks in your environment • Proactively making changes to minimize risks • Learning from errors that occur in order to prevent their reoccurrence

  17. Safety Management Systems? • With the understanding that: • Safety is everyone’s job • Embedded at all levels • Humans are fallible • System defences need to be designed / redesigned to protect patients Culture Of Safety

  18. System Defences • Redundancy and Diversity • Need for multiple layers • Need for multiple approaches • 2 Types of defences • Hard defences – engineered features, forcing functions, constraints • Soft defences – rules, policies, double-checks, signoffs, auditing, reminders

  19. System Defences • Hazardous domains (nuclear power) • activities are stable and predictable • heavy reliance on engineered safety features. • Healthcare defences • most of the defences are human skills. • sharpenders (nurses, junior MDs) are the ‘glue’ that holds these defences together.

  20. System Defences • Disaster happens when: • There are initiating disturbances, AND • The defences fail to detect and/or protect • often necessary for several defences to fail at the same time. • Incidence of error (losses) depends on: • The frequency of initiating disturbance (hazards) • The reliability of the system defences

  21. Reason’s “Swiss Cheese” Model Defences are only as strong as their weakest link! Some holes due to active failures Hazards Other holes due to latent conditions Losses A System Model of Accident Causation

  22. Reason’s “Swiss Cheese” Model Defences are only as strong as their weakest link! Some holes due to active failures Hazards Other holes due to latent conditions Losses A System Model of Accident Causation

  23. An Example • SMH ICU • Patient with CVA has seizure in ICU • MD orders 1g Dilantin over 20 minutes • MD called to reassess patient for severe hypertension and ST changes • Metoprolol given with bradycardia but little BP effect • Pt suffers large MI and CHF

  24. An Example

  25. Reason’s “Swiss Cheese” Model Manufacturer Medicationorganization Hazards Sound-alikelook-alike drug Purchasing LossesCHF/MI RN/MD Double-check

  26. Making Your System Safer • Accept that errors will be made • Incorporate features of Ultra-safe SMS • Actively seek hazards (FMEA, Walk-Rounds) and learn from errors that have occurred (RCA) • Create multiple defense layers to prevent error (hard and soft as appropriate) • Make safety everyone’s job

  27. Making Your System Safer “We cannot change the human condition But… we can change the conditions under which humans work” James Reason

  28. Making Healthcare Reliable • How do you close the hole’s in the Swiss Cheese • Design strong defences • Engineer problem away • Include human factors design (later) • Build in reliable processes reliable

  29. Reliability

  30. Reliability • Measured as the inverse of the system’s failure rate • Failure free operation over time • Chaotic: failure in greater than 20% of events • 10-1: 1 or 2 failures out of 10 • 10-2: <5 failures per 100 • 10-3 : <5 failures per 1000 • 10-4 : <5 failures per 10000

  31. Reliability • Reliability principles, used to design systems that compensate for the limits of human ability, can improve safety and the rate at which a system consist-ently produces desired outcomes.

  32. Reliability • Three-step model for applying principles of reliability to health care systems: • Prevent failure • Identify and Mitigate failure • Redesign the process based on the critical failures identified.

  33. Table Exercises – The case • As your organization’s PSO your are made aware of several patients who received cardiopulmonary resuscitation following Code Blue calls despite known advance directives stating the patients’ wishes were to be DNR • In both cases the DNR order was in the chart but were not easily located nor were the assigned nurses aware of the order

  34. You were aware that No Resuscitation Policy that contained a standardized order form was created, approved by senior management and MAC and was available for use POLICY PRACTICE

  35. Group Exercise • Identify a process to make more reliable • Describe the current process (flow chart) • Identify where the defects occur in the current system • Set a reliability goal for the segment

  36. Roll Out - The Usual Way Discuss & Revise Discuss & Revise B O A R D R O O M Discuss & Revise Initial Plan IDEA R E A L W O R L D

  37. Roll Out - The Better Way B O A R D R O O M Initial Plan IDEA R E A L W O R L D

  38. Applying Reliability • Understand the process • Find the defects, bottlenecks and workarounds • Plan process improvements • Test them…small scale, front-line involvement….until they work • Look for failures and …redesign

  39. Summary • Healthcare has high error rate • Understanding hazards and learning from errors vital • Defences that rely on more than human vigilance need to be in place • Need a strong culture of safety • Need to build reliable processes • Start small….involve frontline • Safety improvement is everyone’s job

  40. Thank You! • Questions? • chayes@cpsi-icsp.ca

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