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Executive Symposium

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Title: Executive Symposium


1
Executive Symposium
  • Surgical Patient Safety Creating a Culture of
    Perioperative Safety
  • July 15 17, 2007
  • Beaver Creek, Colorado

2
Sunday July 15, 2007
3
Mark Warner, MD
4
Areas Where Change will have the Major Impact on
Perioperative Care
  • Changing Demographics
  • Human Genomics
  • Improvement in Technologies

5
Demographics
  • Immigration 1st generation tend to have 3
    children vs. 1 child for the 2nd generation
  • Implications for OB
  • Children younger than 3 benefit from surgery in
    consolidated settings
  • Aging population
  • Americans 65 38 M in 2007
  • Americans 65 85 M in 2040

6
Changes in Anesthesia will offset some of these
changes
  • Minimized procedures
  • Patient targeted therapies
  • Safer anesthetics

7
Genomics
  • Targeted therapies based upon genetic testing to
    ensure
  • Drug efficacy
  • Drug kinetics

8
Nano Technology
9
MondayJuly 16, 2007
10
Stephen Harden, ATP
11
When you have good hardware and good technical
processes, supported by good teamwork and
communication Systems, then you have a culture
that supports safe practices.
12
Aviations Culture Changing Solution
  • Understanding of the Human Condition
  • Plus
  • Teamwork Skills
  • Plus
  • Systems

13
Stop being surprised when people make mistakes,
and start being prepared.
14
Blueprint based on a Real Hospital Experience
  • Corporate goals
  • Dashboard
  • Executive assessment and rewards
  • Attached to credentialing
  • Policies Procedures include teamwork and
    behavior
  • Training Nursing and staff evaluations
  • Capture and publicize successes
  • Managers and admin round
  • Collect data on communication teamwork
  • Yearly refresher training on Patient Safety
    skills and programs

15
Telling is not Training
16
Team Challenge
  • Team Mgt (leader) If you see anything that
    makes you feel uncomfortable or doesnt look
    right, bring it to my attention
  • Recognize red flags
  • Communication (members) Im uncomfortable and
    heres why
  • Decision making process Seek input before
    stating your position
  • Debriefing- 1-2 min What should we do
    differently next time?

17
Geri Amori, PhD
18
Basic Communication is
  • Scaffolding for all effective communication
    hard-wired processes
  • The nano technology of communication and
    teamwork

19
Communication is either Effective or
Ineffective
Geris Principle 1
20
All Communication Has 4 Parts
  • Put Message Into Code (Symbolize)
  • Send the Message (Transmission)
  • Understand the Message (De-code)
  • Show/Prove the Message was Received (Seekback)

Applicable in ALL Forms of Communication!
21
No 2 people live in the same WORLD!
Geris Principle 2
22
Assume that you are NOT understood until proven
otherwise!
Geris Principle 3
23
Effective Communication Requires Asking the Right
Questions
Need to get more information to know
  • What is going on
  • What was understood
  • How it was interpreted
  • How it affects the recipient
  • How the recipients perception of you is
    affecting your relationship

24
The Organization Can Help
  • Develop common vocabulary
  • Develop signals to listen
  • Build in feedback every process
  • Ensure the rules of engagement are followed
  • Work to drive out fear through a Just Culture
  • Value honesty, and reinforce that value
  • ULTIMATELY its up to the individual to SPEAK UP!

25
Christine Zambricki, MS, CRNA
26
Who is the C-Suite
  • Mission
  • Strategy
  • Executive leadership
  • Financial stewardship
  • Quality of Care and Services
  • CEO is most important determinant
  • Boards are important

27
What do we need to know about them?
  • They think things are better than they are
  • Quality movement is confusing Almost 1000
    measures of performance!
  • They dont understand our language
  • They are concerned about the cost of healthcare

28
Whats on their mind
  • Cost of healthcare
  • Who are we?
  • Goofballs?
  • Mistake waiting to happen?
  • Mysterious at best
  • Their focus Execution people, strategy,
    operations

29
3 Kinds of Employees
  • 30 - Actively engaged
  • 54- Not engaged
  • 16 - Actively not engaged
  • (source cited on slides)

30
What to Communicate
  • Full data transparency
  • Data AND stories
  • Involve patients and families
  • Set the expectations, adopt and report big,
    measurable aims
  • Communication, disclosure, support resolution,
    learning

31
(Talent Fit) x Investment Growth and Impact
32
With the Right People
Source cited on slide in presentation
33
John Paige, MD
34
Teamwork Issues
  • Differences in perception among members of the
    team about the efficacy of team functioning,
    roles, communication, and self-insight
  • Differences in nurses and physicians perceive
    guidelines and rules
  • Consequences
  • Disruption
  • Tension

35
High Reliability Team Function
  • Culture of Safety
  • Human factors Engineering
  • Decrease complexity
  • Optimize information processing
  • Automate intelligently
  • Employ constraints
  • Physical
  • Procedural
  • Cultural

36
Role of Simulation
  • Brings up systems issues when entire staff
    trained
  • Improved team communication
  • Disaster is the mother of invention!

37
Lena Napolitano, MD
38
Expansion of Use of Universal Protocol
Universal Time Out
  • Correct patient, site, procedure
  • Prevent surgical site infection
  • DVT prophylaxis
  • Beta-blockade if appropriate
  • Blunt suture needles
  • Double glove, neutral zone

39
Contribution to wrong site surgery
  • Human factors team training
  • Patient factors -
  • Procedure factors improved technology

40
Problem Persists
  • More reporting since Universal Protocol
    established in 2004
  • Of 2,474 SE, 1 wrong-site surgery (n532)

Source cited on slide in presentation
41
JCAHO Consensus Summit February, 2007
  • Refinements to Universal Protocol that details
    expected process steps
  • Zero tolerance for failure to follow universal
    protocol and long term, zero tolerance for these
    sentinel events

42
www.wrong-side.orgpublic reporting site with
tools for your institution
43
Wrong Site Surgery Highest Implicated Factors
  • 53 activities of Surgeon in OR
  • 34 Failure of Time Out

Source cited on slide in presentation
44
Factors that Helped Correct a Near Miss
  • Patient/family participation (23)
  • Surgeon involvement (pre-operative before pt
    enters OR) (19)
  • Consent (17)
  • Patient information (16)
  • Office records (13)

Source cited on slide in presentation
45
Expanded Universal Time-Out
  • Completion of any applicable patient-care/patient
    safety protocols
  • Prophylactic antibiotics of SSi
  • Does patient have infection or colonization with
    MDR-pathogens
  • DVT prophylaxis
  • Beta-blockade in appropriate patients
  • OR team review of patients current medications

46
More
  • Pressure ulcer prevention
  • Medications labeled properly on sterile field
  • Clinical and physiologic alarms audible
  • Patiently appropriately restrained to prevent
    falls
  • Efforts to reduce surgical fires implemented
  • Use of blunt suture needles when appropraite

47
Lena and her Teams Vision
  • Consolidated checklists among the disciplines
  • Expanded time out that moves towards an expanded
    safety culture
  • Using technology to help (e.g., Live Data OR
    Dashboard has checklist on it)

48
What We Share
  • How do we define time out (where does it begin
    and what does it include)?
  • How do we deal with the dynamic tension between
    regulation, practicality, and what supports
    safety?
  • Does more regulation and refinement support or
    deter safe care?

49
Ajit Sachdeva, MD
50
Creating a Culture
  • Focusing on health care providers, patients and
    their families

51
Lessons from HRA
  • Culture that is supportive and yet emphasizes
    accountability

52
Enhance PS trough Practice Based Learning and
ImprovementCycle of learning
  • Gap analysis ID area for improvement
  • Practice Based Learning System benchmarking tool
  • Evidence based tools for benchmarking in Surgery

53
  • Engage in learning
  • Simulated situations for learning using
    standardized patients for residents
  • Simulation for learning at the CME level
  • Apply new knowledge and skills to practice
  • Check for improvement

54
Need GREAT technical skills in addition to GREAT
communication and teamwork skills to improve
care!
55
5 levels Verification
  • Verification of Attendance
  • Verification of Satisfactory Completion of Course
    Objective
  • Verification of Knowledge and Skills (They want
    to go beyond current levels of measurement to
    where the faculty can verify actual skill)
  • Verification of Preceptorial Experience
  • Demonstration of Patient Outcomes

56
Moving toward Interdisciplinary Learning Programs
57
ACS Closed Claims Study
  • 90 of 460 (19.8) filed entirely or largely
    because of communication failures
  • Communication failures occurred in 70 of 414
    claims (16.9) involved surgical procedures
  • Communication failures occurred in 20 of 46 (43)
    of non surgical encounters

Source cited on slide in presentation
58
Barriers to Safe Hand-offs
  • Physical setting
  • Social setting
  • Language barriers
  • Medium of communication
  • Influenced by time limits for Residents

59
Creative Programs
  • Disclosure CD-Rom Immersion
  • Professionalism CD-Rom
  • Grumpy surgeon
  • Disruptive surgeon
  • Age impaired surgeon
  • Acknowledging error
  • Fatigued surgeon
  • Its All about Me
  • Demoralized,etc

60
TuesdayJuly 17, 2007
61
Joseph Grenny
62
We learn early on that we have to limit truth to
spare relationships.
63
The process that impedes the flow of information
to those who need it is critical to change for
patient safety
64
Top MD Crucial Conversations
  • Family problems
  • MD Accountability issues
  • Needing clarity on roles and responsibilities
  • Peer problems Negotiating partnership terms
  • Strategic issues Where is the organization
    going?

65
Lack of Crucial Conversations -Derailleur of
Quality and Safety
66
Best predictor of quality is the stability of
the learning environment
67
4 out of 5 people who leave your company will
not talk fully about why they are leaving.
68
Any time you find yourself having recurring
problems, concerns, etc. you need to ask yourself
what conversation are you NOT having. What causes
problems to persist is frequently the inability
to discuss the issue.
69
Real Examples of How People Avoid Crucial
Conversations
  • Leave and start their own business
  • Work from home rather than go to office
  • Throw pencils
  • Give up medical practice
  • Blind copy and forward e-mails
  • Have a heart attack
  • Write an obituary for the offender (then tear it
    up)

70
Silence Killswww.silencekills.com
71
Common Concerns w/Colleagues(at least 10 of
their colleagues)
  • 50-80 report concerns Competence
  • 75 - Work Ethic Issues
  • 49-85 - Mistakes
  • 85 - Broken Rules
  • 53 - Lack of Support
  • 75 - Disrespect
  • (couldnt see this one.)

72
About 25 of the time the problem has persisted
more than 5 years!
73
3 ways to know if you are not holding the right
conversation
  • If during the conversation you are getting
    increasing frustrated
  • If youre having the same conversation twice
  • If youre stuck at one level of conversation, you
    need to move to a deeper level

74
3 Types of Conversation CPR
  • Content
  • Pattern
  • Relationship

75
Keys to Success
  • Start with Heart
  • Learn to look
  • Make it safe
  • Master my stories
  • State my path
  • Explore others paths
  • Move to action

76
The Main one Make it Safe
77
The first 30 seconds determine whether you will
conduct that discussion effectively.
78
How to Create the Psychological Safety
  • Make sure the person knows you care about their
    interests and their problems
  • Make sure that you not only care about their
    problems but that you respect them

79
To see how this can workDelancy RestaurantSan
Francisco
80
Creating a Culture of Mutual Respect at
Maimonides Medical Center
  • David Feldman, MD
  • Kathryn Kaplan, PhD
  • Pamela Mestel, RN, MSN

81
Its like psychic surgery to change a culture!
- Kathryn
82
Steps to Change respect
  • Part of Leadership Development initiative
  • Research
  • Pilot

83
Pilots
  • Leaders as champions
  • Mediated Conversations
  • Tracking of Systems issues
  • Skills training
  • Measurement- Respect Survey

84
Mediated Conversations
  • The involved parties
  • Someone who supports their point of view
  • Mediator

85
We are going to hold people accountable to
respect each other. - The CEO Maimonides
Medical Center
86
Vision
  • The Medical Staff encourages all members of the
    hospital community to work together in a
    collaborative fashion such that unfavorable
    interactions can be either avoided, or addressed
    by the parties involved in a professional,
    productive manner.

87
Two Final Points from David Feldman
  • Safety efforts will not succeed without mutual
    respect
  • Physicians must be leaders

88
Team Training at Beth Israel Deaconess
  • Donald Moorman, MD
  • Elena Canacari, RN, CNOR

89
How to Change Culture
  • Alter our perceptions of problems to be solved
  • Alter perception of our effectiveness
  • Alter understanding about how we integrate and
    externally adapt
  • Change assumptions
  • Change some core values
  • Over time

Taken from their slides
90
Keys to their Success
  • Interdisciplinary teams to manage problems
  • Didactic team training (4 hours)
  • Whole team simulation

91
Team Metrics
  • Adverse Events
  • Disruptive behavior episodes
  • Work Satisfaction Inventory
  • Patient Safety Attitude Survey
  • OR Staff Vacancies
  • Events to be celebrated
  • Liability exposure
  • OR Performance Metrics

92
Business Case OR Metrics
  • Start Time Efficiency Increased from 45-89!
    (Focus on Pre-op hold area)
  • Intraoperative Pathways -
  • OR Staff Turnover/Cost of New Hires 5(?)
    reduction in RN turnover
  • Supply Budget Reductions Major Savings!
  • Employee Survey Results Improved

93
Red-Green Cards in Pre-op
  • Placed in front of chart
  • When red it means there is something missing
  • Green Good to Go
  • Huge Cost savings per year 20 minutes per case
    _at_ 48 per minute!

94
OR RN New Hire Cost
  • Inexperienced 131,918
  • Experienced 45,192

95
Total Cost Savings based on metrics is about 3.5
Million Dollars
96
Spin-offs beyond the OR!
  • SICU
  • Triggers RRT
  • Nursing Huddles
  • Whole Team simulations
  • And more

97
Patient centricity and mutual respect are core
valuesDonald Moorman
98
Human Factors in the OR 1 Year Follow-up
  • Nadeem R Abu-Rustum, MD
  • Eric Kelhoffer, MD
  • Aileen Killen, RN, PhD
  • David Marshall

99
Process
  • Took advantage of new OR Platform so closed OR
    for 3 days Incorporated team training with
    physical layout training
  • Champions
  • Lesson MD buy-in is not the same as a champion
  • Designed Wall of Knowledge Leverage
    technology to help w/ Team Behaviors

100
Things they notice that affect the team
  • Have problems when the team plan changes
    (negative)
  • Trouble getting briefings off the ground
    (negative)
  • Using team members names (positive)

101
Its hard to be self-actualized when you cant
find a Foley!
102
Summary Report of 1 Yr Eval
  • Safety and Teamwork scores improved on 11 of 12
    measures
  • Training Effectiveness Areas needing
    improvement
  • Frequency of events reported
  • Non-punitive report to error
  • Feedback and communication of error

103
Quality and Safety in the ASC
  • Becky Small, RNC, MS
  • David Zarin, MD

104
USPI EDGE
  • Every
  • Day
  • Giving
  • Excellence

105
Todays Proven Processes
  • Best practices gathered by team
  • Staff puts them together
  • Starts from the time a patient enters the center
    until they leave the center

106
Edge Methodology
  • What is the problem? (Plan)
  • What is the solution? (Plan, contd)
  • How do we implement change?( Do)
  • How do we know if it worked? (Study/act)
  • What can you share with others?
  • Mirrors the PDSA model

107
Edge On-line
  • Weekly and monthly clinical audits (reportable
    incidences)
  • Leadership
  • Monthly reports for outcome metrics
  • Facilities can trend data to track areas to need
    improvement
  • Benchmark with other USPI like facilities

108
USPI Encourages
  • Fair and just culture
  • Embraced by leadership
  • Ensuring every employee is accountable for
    assuring the safety of every patient

109
Common Themes from the Symposium
110
Themes
  • Change is tough
  • Change requires articulating what you vision for
    the outcome
  • Change requires understanding the human condition
  • Change requires interpersonal respect
  • Change requires standards for behavior, training
    on appropriate behavior, and holding people to
    that behavior

111
Themes
  • Interpersonal skills are essential but not the
    sole skills required to improve safety
  • Processes must be in place
  • Use technology to help support teamwork
  • Never ever give up!
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