Patient Safety. Annual Continuing Education Modules. Contents



Similar documents
U.S. Department of Health & Human Services May 7, New HHS Data Shows Major Strides Made in Patient Safety, Leading to Improved Care and Savings

Hospital Information. Facility Name: Primary HEN Contact: Quality Lead: Infection Preventionist: HEN 2.0 Survey Questions

Reducing Medical Errors for CNAs

Improving Hospital Performance

Nursing Quality: Measurement and Improvement

Reporting Adverse Events and Concerns at Stroger Hospital

National Quality Forum Safe Practices for Better Healthcare

Improving Safety: Developing Safety Metrics and Improving Error Reporting. Petra Khoury, Pharm D Adnan Tahir, MD

Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR) Program

Incorporating Best Practices Into Undergraduate Critical Care Nursing Education

Value-Based Purchasing Program Overview. Maida Soghikian, MD Grand Rounds Scripps Green Hospital November 28, 2012

NEVER EVENT LISTS ENDORSED BY NATIONAL QUALITY FORUM & MEDICARE

Staff should not feel that the Quality Management staff are policing them. These thoughts

National Quality Forum (NQF) Endorsed Set of 34 Safe Practices*

NDNQI. NDNQI:Transforming Data into Quality Care Rainbow Boulevard, M/S University of Kansas Medical Center

May 7, Submitted Electronically

National Provider Call: Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS HOSPITAL & HEALTH SCIENCES SYSTEM: FINANCIAL REPORT AND SYSTEM DASHBOARDS May 29, 2013

Adverse Drug Events and Medication Safety: Diabetes Agents and Hypoglycemia

Errors in the Operating Room. Patrick E. Voight RN BSN MSA CNOR President Association of perioperative Registered Nurses (AORN)

National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) Introduction & Enrollment

What Is Patient Safety?

Patient Care Services Quality Report Evaluation of 2013 Outcomes August 2014

Facts about The Joint Commission

State HAI Template Utah. 1. Develop or Enhance HAI program infrastructure

healthcare associated infection 1.2

INSTITUTIONAL POLICY AND PROCEDURE (IPP) Department: Manual: Section:

Strategies and Tools to Enhance Performance and Patient Safety

DISTRIBUTION: This Patient Safety Plan shall be distributed hospital-wide and online.

Relevant Quality Measures for Critical Access Hospitals

Medical Errors A report by the staff of U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer

National Patient Safety Goals Effective January 1, 2015

Written Statement. for the. Senate Finance Committee of The United States

Value Based Purchasing (VBP) Awareness Brief. FY 2018 Value Based Purchasing Program Domain Weighting

Patient Safety: Applying Industrial Quality Models in Healthcare Settings Tempora mutantur, nos et mutamur in illis

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Acute Care Hospital Fiscal Year (FY) 2018 Quality Improvement Program Measures

June 25, Dear Acting Administrator Tavenner,

Safe Minimum RN Staffing Standards: Improve Quality of Care and Protect Patient Safety

Macrosystems: Policy, Payment, Regulation, Accreditation, and Education to Improve Safety

Preventing Readmissions

Risk Management and Patient Safety Evolution and Progress

An Overview of Accreditation Results: Alberta

The Physician s Guide to The Joint Commission s Hospital Standards and Accreditation Process

Exchanged Quality Data for Rehabilitation (EQUADR SM ) Patient Safety Organization & Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility Quality Reporting

Quality and Performance Improvement PATRICK SCHULTZ MS RN ACNS BC DIRECTOR OF QUALITY AND PATIENT SAFETY SANFORD MEDICAL CENTER FARGO

VUMC Guidelines for Management of Indwelling Urinary Catheters. UC Access/ Maintenance

CMS Office of Public Affairs MEDICARE PROPOSES NEW HOSPITAL VALUE-BASED PURCHASING PROGRAM

Spotlight on Success: Implementing Nurse-Driven Protocols to Reduce CAUTIs

PATIENT CARE POLICY III.

Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infection (CAUTI) Prevention. System CAUTI Prevention Team

DATE APPROVED: DATE EFFECTIVE: Date of Approval. REFERENCE NO. MOH/04 PAGE: 1 of 7

APPROVED: 2010 National Patient Safety Goals

Measuring and Benchmarking Quality for Rehabilitation Care. EQUADR SM and the changing landscape of postacute

Sentinel Events Medical Errors. Edited Dr. E. Terry, DIO Dr. S.K. Oliver OME

National Patient Safety Goals Effective January 1, 2015

Data Analysis Project Summary

Lippincott Professional Development Categories

CAUTI Collaborative. Objectives. Speaker. Panelists

Changing Clinical Behaviors to Lower Costs and Reduce Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections (CAUTI)

THE EFFECTS OF NURSE EDUCATION AND CERTIFICATION ON HOSPITAL- ACQUIRED INFECTIONS

Bad Data In Is Bad Data Out. The Critical Role of Clean Item Master Data in Successful Value Analysis Efforts

convey the clinical quality measure's title, number, owner/developer and contact

Evidence Based Practice to. Value Based Purchasing. Barb Rogness BSN MS Building Bridges May 2013

Course Brochure From the UK s leading e-learning provider. Providing specialist online training to the healthcare sector

Introduction to Infection Control

Transcription:

Annual Continuing Education Modules Patient Safety This self-directed learning module contains information you are expected to know to protect yourself, our patients, and our guests. Target Audience: Contents All Employees Instructions...2 Learning Objectives...2 Module Content...3 Job Aid...7 Posttest...9 Carolinas HealthCare System

Instructions: The material in this module is an introduction to important general information and procedures for patient safety. After completing this module, contact your supervisor to obtain additional information specific to your department. Read this module. If you have any questions about the material, ask your supervisor. Complete the online posttest for this module. The Job Aid on page 7 should be customized to fit your department s policies and procedures and then used as a quick reference guide. Learning Objectives: When you finish this module, you will be able to: Discuss the purpose of the CHS Patient Safety program. Identify the SAFER TOGETHER components. Explain how to report a patient safety concern. Define a non-punitive environment. Identify The Joint Commission s National Patient Safety Goals. Identify the goals of the Hospital Engagement Network (HEN). 2

Patient Safety Program CHS is committed to the safety of our patients. The purpose of the patient safety program is to eliminate patient harm associated with preventable adverse events at CHS and to improve the safety of care delivery through identification, analysis, and reduction of risk. Patient Safety Definitions Patient Safety Freedom from accidental injury or the degree to which the risk of an intervention and risk in the care environment are reduced for a patient, and other persons, including healthcare practitioners. Patient Safety Event Any identified defect, error, medical accident, near miss medical accident, device failure, sentinel event, medication error, significant procedural variance, or other threat to safety that could or did result in patient injury. Near Miss An occurrence or situation that could have resulted in an accident, injury or illness, but did not, either by chance or through timely intervention. Medication Error Any preventable event that may cause or lead to inappropriate medication use or patient harm while the medication is in the control of the healthcare professional, patient or consumer. Human Error Inadvertently doing other than what should have been done, a slip, lapse, or mistake. National Patient Safety Goals (NPSG) In 2002, The Joint Commission established its National Patient Safety Goals (NPSGs) program; the first set of NPSGs was effective January 1, 2003. The NPSGs were established to help accredited organizations address specific areas of concern in regards to patient safety. 3

At CHS, we believe we are SAFER TOGETHER. The SAFER TOGETHER program includes several components: Identifying risks for patient harm Reducing actual patient harm Encouraging a learning environment Creating a culture of safety Your Responsibility: Everyone at CHS is responsible for the safety of our patients. If you feel a patient s safety is at risk in your area, immediately report it to your supervisor or manager. Any staff member that identifies a patient safety concern has a duty to report it. Examples of Patient Safety issues: 1. A patient without an armband 2. Failure to communicate important information with other healthcare team members 3. Medications that are not secure 4. Failure to use correct hand hygiene 5. Patients at risk for falls 6. Unlabeled medications on or off the sterile field 7. Incorrect patient identification How to report a patient safety event, medication error, near miss, Adverse Drug Reaction (ADR) or unsafe condition: Fill out a Care Event Report online within 24 hours of discovery, if not immediately via the CARE Event Reporting link on your hospital intranet. Online reporting allows for more complete and responsive tracking of events. Non-Punitive Environment CHS supports a non-punitive environment for reporting patient safety issues and medication errors in order to foster a culture of safety where we can learn from our experiences and reduce future risk to patients. CHS believes in examining our processes and systems of patient care as a risk reduction measure. We cannot improve unless we are aware of and carefully examine our issues. CHS believes in minimizing individual blame or retribution for involvement in a medical error. CHS believes staff is accountable for their behavioral choices. 4

The Joint Commission (TJC) National Patient Safety Goals Everyone at CHS is responsible for helping meet ALL of these goals. TJC s 2013 National Patient Safety Goals: Identify patients correctly Improve staff communication Use medications safely Prevent Infections Identify patient safety risks (identify individuals at risk for suicide). Prevent mistakes in surgery (Universal Protocol) For additional information about the NPSGs, please click on the link: http://www.jointcommission.org/assets/1/18/npsg_chapter_jan2013_hap.pdf The Hospital Engagement Network (HEN) As a key component of the Partnership for Patients, CHS was selected by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to be one of 27 Hospital Engagement Networks (HEN) nationwide All CHS hospitals have committed to full participation Intent is to achieve the goals of the Partnership for Patients (PfP) by the end of 2013 a. 40% reduction in hospital acquired conditions Adverse Drug Events Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections (CAUTI) Central Line Bloodstream Infections (CLABSI) Injuries from Falls and Immobility Obstetrical Adverse Events Pressure Ulcers Surgical Site Infections Venous Thromboembolism Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia b. 20% reduction in preventable readmissions 5

The CHS HEN seeks to engage facilities through discussions, support and culture change through its internal Quality Safety and Operations Councils (QSOCs TM ). The purpose of QSOC is to serve as a System-wide collaborative platform to envision, drive and integrate quality and patient safety excellence across CHS facilities. CHS Quality has over 20 QSOCs established across the System, the relevant QSOCs TM working on HEN focus areas include the following: Medication Safety, Infection Prevention and Control, Patient Safety/Falls, Pressure Ulcer Prevention, Labor & Delivery, Surgery, VTE and Readmissions. Each QSOC TM addresses a single focus area with the exception of Infection Prevention and Control, which addresses CAUTI, CLABSI and VAP. QSOCs also help to manage and improve quality and patient safety outcomes. 6

JOB AID 1 2 3 4 5 The purpose of the patient safety program is to eliminate patient harm associated with preventable adverse events at CHS and to improve the safety of care delivery through identification, analysis, and reduction of risk. A near miss is a category used to describe conditions that could have harmed patients but did not. The Joint Commission s 2013 National Patient Safety Goals are: Improve the accuracy of patient identification Improve the effectiveness of communication among caregivers Improve the safety of using medications Reduce the risk of health care-associated infections Identify safety risks inherent in its patient population (identifies individuals at risk for suicide) The organization meets the expectations of the Universal Protocol to prevent errors in surgery (Right site, right procedure, right patient) Examples of patient safety issues include: A patient without an armband Failure to communicate important information with other healthcare team members Medications that are not secure Failure to use correct hand hygiene Patients at risk for falls Unlabeled medications on or off the sterile field Incorrect patient identification If a patient s safety is in danger in your area, immediately report it to your supervisor or manager. Any staff member identifying a patient safety concern has a duty to report it. 7

6 7 8 The intent of the Hospital Engagement Network (HEN) is to reduce hospital acquired conditions by 40% and preventable readmissions by 20%. The hospital acquired conditions the HEN has identified for the 40% reduction include: Adverse Drug Events Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections (CAUTI) Central Line Bloodstream Infections (CLABSI) Injuries from Falls and Immobility Obstetrical Adverse Events Pressure Ulcers Surgical Site Infections The mission of CHS Patient Safety QSOC (Quality and Safety Operations Council) is to foster a safe environment for patients throughout Carolinas HealthCare System. 8

Posttest Name: Date: Choose the correct answer. 1. Which of the following is a near miss? a. a patient fall resulting in a wrist fracture b. a fire drill c. an event that occurs during patient care that could have caused harm but did not d. none of the above 2. Which of the following is part of The Joint Commission s National Patient Safety Goals? a. Universal Protocol b. Making sure patients have safe rides home when they are discharged c. Improving the accuracy of patient identification. d. Identifying individuals at risk for suicide e. A, C and D 3. Who is responsible for patient safety? a. The physician b. The patient s nurse c. Housekeeping d. The unit secretaries e. All of the above f. A and B only 4. CHS supports a non-punitive environment by: a. Encouraging reporting of patient safety issues and medication errors b. Requesting staff to not make a mistake c. Learning from our experiences d. Examining our processes and systems e. Holding staff accountable for their behavioral choices f. A, C, D, and E 9

5. The Hospital Engagement Network s (HEN) goals are to a. Reduce hospital acquired conditions by 40% b. Reduce preventable readmissions by 20% c. Reduce waste in healthcare d. A and B only e. All of the above 6. All of the following are examples of patient safety issues except: a. Patient without an armband b. Failure to use correct hand hygiene c. Patients sleeping with the lights on d. Lack of communication between all staff 7. What is an example of an adverse event in the Hospital Engagement Network (HEN)? a. Foreign object retained after surgery b. Pressure Ulcer (Bedsore) c. Patient Fall d. Catheter-associated urinary tract infection 1. A only 2. A & C only 3. B, C, D only 4. All of the above 8. Examples of QSOCs (Quality and Safety Operations Council) looking at Patient Safety issues are a. Medication Safety b. Falls c. Patient Safety d. Pressure Ulcer e. All of the Above Carolinas HealthCare System 10