Title: Best Practice
1The Wait of a Lifetime
2HRSA Organ Donation Transplantation
Breakthrough Collaborative Initiative
3Best Practice 1Involve Senior Leadership to
Advocate Donation as the Mission
4- Wed. Senior Leadership Meeting
- Report Out
- Dr. Tony DAlessandro
5Involving Senior LeadershipNursing Patient
Care ServicesDianne M. Danis, RN,MSDirector,
Nursing Practice InnovationUniversity of
Wisconsin Hospital Clinics
6Joint Commission 10Cs
- Commitment of leadership
- Champion for the cause identified
- Culture of priority for organ donation created
- Collaborative effort with OPO
- Communicate organ donation opportunities rapidly
to OPO
7Joint Commission 10Cs
- 6. Check progress through dashboard
- 7. Conversion rate monitored improved
- 8. Counsel potential donor families effectively
- 9. Clarify policies procedures infrastructure
- 10. Criteria established for DCD
8Commitment Championship
- Sr VP Nursing Patient Care Services Nursing
Executive Council identified need for increased
efforts to support donation - Small director steering group established to
discuss issues identify solutions - Director of Nursing Practice Innovation
identified as point person champion
9Collaborative Effort
- Joint meetings initiated with nursing steering
group and OPO representatives - Meetings now include MTF representative as well
- New designated requestor training program jointly
developed coordinated - Collaborative Nursing Grand Rounds presented
March 21 - Currently looking at data collection reporting
10Counsel Families Effectively
- Designated Requestor role restricted to RNs from
high-occurrence units, nursing coordinators,
social workers, OPO staff - Initial training is 4-hour course taught by OPO
- Trained requestors are entered into nursing
database coordinators assist in identifying
requestors when necessary - Brief annual updates are planned
- After action reviews
11Clarify Infrastructure
- Development of guidelines for identifying
designated requestor - Development of course curriculum
- Key concepts integrated into orientation
- Report of Death form in development
- Current focus on streamlining M/T process
12Reflections
- What is it about this work?
- How to engage senior leadership?
13Best Practice 2Practice Early Referral by
Establishing Clinical Triggers
14Best Practice 2 Early Referral and Rapid
Response Establishing Clinical Triggers
15Clinical Triggers
- A Mechanically Ventilated Patient with a Severe
Brain Injury- - For Whom a Physician is Evaluating for Brain
Death - A Patient with a Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) of 5
or less - For Whom a Physician has Ordered Life Sustaining
Therapies be Withdrawn
16How Clinical Triggers Improve the Organ Donation
Process
- Clarifies when to notify the OPO
- Ensures timely notification to the OPO
- Allows for ongoing communication and
relationship building between the patients
family, hospital and OPO before requesting organ
donation
17Model for Improvement
18Model for Improvement3 Key Questions
- 1. What are we trying to accomplish?
- 2. How will we know if a change is an
improvement? - 3. What changes can we make that will result in
improvement?
19Process for Testing ChangesPlan-Do-Check-Act
Planplan the change to be tested Docarry out
the plan, make observations, record
data Studyanalyze data, summarize what was
learned Actplan implementation or plan next cycle
20Addition of Clinical Triggers to the Electronic
Trauma Flow Sheet
- Paula Vogt, RN
- Aspirus Wausau Hospital
-
- UWHC-OPO
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26- Effective Question for the Audience
- Dennis Wagner
27 28- WOW!
- What changed for the better? (possibility)
- HOW?
- What is the driver of that change?
- (opportunity)
29- Question to run on
- What is the actionable insight
- you are taking from these best practice
presentations?
30Best Practice 3Identify Donation Champions
31Best Practice 3Identify Donation Champions
- Kristina Engeseth
- UW Health Organ Procurement Organization
32Best Practice Definition
- Identify and support organ donation champions at
various hospital levels include team leaders who
are willing to be called upon to overcome
barriers to organ donation in real time
33Who are Organ Donation Champions?
Community members, donor family representatives,
recipients and representatives from all levels of
professional staff
- Hospital senior leadership
- Physician representatives
- Nursing representatives
- Social work
- Pastoral care
- Respiratory therapy
- Laboratory
- Quality improvement
- Pre-hospital care providersEMT/Paramedic,
transport
34Who are Organ Donation Champions?
- Committed to promoting proactive advocacy for
organ donation into personal and institutional
goals - Common goal of identifying best practices and
incorporating them into institutional policies
and practices
35What is the Role of an Organ Donation Champion?
- Advocate organ donation
- Link the hospital to the OPO and other recovery
agencies - Facilitate the process of organ donation and help
overcome barriers
36What is the Role of an Organ Donation Champion?
- Committed to
- The goal of every donation opportunity, every
organ, every time - Making best practices common practice by being
the go to person - Using the Model for Improvement to implement
change
37Best Practice ShowcaseOrgan Donation Resource
Team
- Sue Olson, RN
- Gundersen Lutheran Medical Center
- Rita Roberts, RRT, RN, CCRN
- Gundersen Lutheran Medical Center
38Why?
- Organ donation is an infrequent and unique
opportunity - 13 organ donors at Gundersen Lutheran Medical
Center in 2006 - Beneficial to have staff that are experienced in
organ donor management - There are always ways to improve the donation
process - Support our donor families
- Support our staff
39Why?
- The donor family benefits when we work together
to create an integrated process not dependent on
individuals - Recognized that staff also benefits from an
integrated process - Strong commitment to every donation opportunity,
every organ, every time
40First Steps
- Developed vision for team
- Met with ICU Manager to garner support and
commitment - Recruited experienced ICU staff
- ICU Manager met with VP to secure approval for
team - Meeting with HR Department to develop
compensation package
41Benefits
- Specially trained and experienced staff assisting
with the care of every potential organ donor - Timely implementation of hospital organ donor
guidelines and OPO orders - Experience/educational opportunities for staff
- Increased staff satisfaction
- Increased number of organs recovered and
transplanted per donor
42Measurement Strategy
- Time from
- Verbal consent to written consent
- Verbal consent to brain death declaration
- Written consent to brain death declaration
- Consent to transfer of charges to OPO
- Written consent to OR
- Donor management goals
- BD donors on multiple pressors to be started on
T4 protocol - pH 7.45
- Na
- EF 50 (final echo at least 2 hours after brain
death) - Inotropes
- Dopamine 5 mcg or less
- No levophed
- Neosynephrine 50 mcg or less
- Organs recovered and transplanted per donor
43What Did We Learn?
- Support is needed from staff at all levels
- Bedrock belief in organ donation process
- Advocacy for every organ donation opportunity,
every organ, every time - Financial support
- Team allows for collaborative practice and
integrated process within entire organization - Staff and donor families are better supported
- Organ donation is such an unique opportunity for
everyone - Team structure allows for experience and support
to always be available
44Thank You!
Sue Olson smolson2_at_gundluth.org
Rita Roberts rjrobert_at_gundluth.org
Kristina Engeseth kengeseth_at_uwhealth.org
45Best Practice 4After Action Reviews
46CONDUCTING AFTER ACTION REVIEWS
- Sue Hamilton, RN
- UW Health Organ Procurement Organization
-
- Dena Jarog, CNS, PICU
- St. Joseph's Childrens Hospital Marshfield
47What is an AAR?
- After Action Review (AAR)
- Brings hospital staff and OPO staff together to
discuss a completed donation case or situations
warranting a debriefing - Has been identified as a National Best Practice
for increasing donation rates
48Facilitator
OPOStaff
HospitalStaff
49After Action Review FrameworkNo project is
complete until it has been reviewed and its
lessons learned Nancy Dixon
- 1) What did we set out to do?
- 2) What did we actually do?
- 3) What have we learned?
- 4) What are we going to do?
- 5) Who are we going to tell?
50Implementation Has Ledto SUCCESS!
- Best practices are spread real time
- OPO and hospital staff are actively involved and
relationships are stronger - Positive outcomes for families making end of life
decisions - All teach/all learn environment is strong and
healthy
51Ensure SUCCESS
- Offer AAR in real time
- Conduct AAR within 1-2 weeks of case
- Frame AAR as a positive experience allowing all
participants to share thoughts - Identify hospital partner to assist in
facilitating - Use standard form to record results
- Set up teleconference line
- Follow-up on action items and share learning
points
52OPO Perspective
- Donation Outcomes
- Opportunity to share updates on recipients and
donor families - Clinical Staff
- Emotional component of reconnecting
- Builds rapport between hospital and OPO staff
- Allows time to offer support
- Hospital Services Staff
- Effectively facilitates AAR
- Responsible for documentation
- Plan for follow-up on action items
53Hospital Perspective
- AAR identifies challenges and opportunities for
improvement - Hospital / OPO / Combined issues
- Timeliness
- St Josephs Hospital is committed to the Tuesday
morning following a case - All Teach, All Learn
- True collaborative style, learn together
- Safe environment
- Open communication
54Hospital Perspective
- Reflect and Debrief
- Unresolved challenges and feelings of frustration
are not brought into the next donation - Celebrate!
- Positive outcomes of organs transplanted
55Special Thanks to
YOU!
56- Effective Question for the Audience
- Dennis Wagner
57- Question to run on
- What is the actionable insight
- you are taking from these best practice
presentations?
58Best Practice 5Create an OPO Hospital
Presence,In-House CoordinatorModel
59Best Practice 5Create an OPO/Hospital Presence,
In-house Coordinator Model
60Definition
- Integrated and flexible organ donation team
identifies and uses the strengths of all the OPO
and hospitals players in a well-defined donation
process - Assumes stewardship for well-defined family
support - Availability real-time
- Accountability for achieving high outcomes
- Established communication system to get the
right people, right place, right time
61In-House Coordinator Model
- Life Gift, Houston 1996
- 2 FT nurses in 2 Level 1 trauma centers
- Fully integrated into hospital operations
- High visibility continuous education, increased
early referrals, immediate problem-solving - Meet regularly with hospital staff to review
cases and organ donation performance - Profiled as a best practice during HRSA Organ
Donation Breakthrough Collaborative initiative - Various adaptations of IHC model nationally
62Donor Hospital PerspectiveThedacare In-house
Coordinator Model
- Peg Grambsch, RN
- Theda Clark Medical Center
- Judy Struble, RN
- Appleton Medical Center
63Development of the Role
- Became aware of best practice from the
collaborative - Developed goals, responsibilities and a vision
- Proposed concept to senior management
- Developed a timeline and job description
- Continued meetings with senior leaders
- Provided data of other hospitals outcomes
- Approval from senior management
64Key FunctionsA Day-in-the-Life of an IHC
- Daily follow-up on referrals
- Real-time data collection
- Problem-solving and customer service
- Continuous education of staff and physicians
- Maintain regulatory requirements
- Update policy and procedures
- Implement collaborative best practices
- Community education
65Improvements
- Epic Access for OPO Coordinators
- Real-time, web access to patients medical record
- Training
- Referral Sheet Process
- Real-time chart reviews
- Decreased telephone time
66Benefits of the Role
- Increased family support
- Dedicated, expert donation resource available to
staff and physicians - Real-time problem-solving
- Real-time chart reviews
- Promoting donor awareness in the community
- Regulatory compliance
67What we have learned
- Effective family support is critical to achieving
high donation outcomes - Incorporating Dual Advocacy techniques
- Even when there is a process in place, every
donation experience is different - Maintain continuous collaboration with various
donation organizations (OPO, tissue, eye) - Dashboard is an helpful tool to monitor and
identify areas for improvement (ex. Clinical
triggers) - Real-time problem-solving is the best solution
68Best Insights
- Work with senior leadership to establish the
goals and vision for donation at your hospital - Regularly discuss your dashboard results with key
leaders - Continue to identify and test best practices to
improve those results - Involve staff and physician champions from key
areas - Develop an effective family support process
69Best Practice 6Implement Donation After
Cardiac Death
70Best Practice 6Implement Donation After
Cardiac DeathJill Ellefson, Manager of Hospital
Services
71Donor Family PerspectiveSue Dillon
72Donation after Cardiac Death (DCD) versus
Donation after Brain Death (DBD)
- DBD
- Severe injury from trauma,CVA, or anoxic event
- Meets Brain death criteria
- Clinical exam
- Confirmatory exam
- Brain death declaration by physician
- Organ recovery begins after declaration of death
- Patient on ventilator until organs recovered
- DCD
- Severe injury from trauma,CVA, or anoxic event
- Does not meet criteria for brain death
- Cannot survive without mechanical ventilation
- Family and doctor elect to withdraw life support
- Withdrawal of life support in OR or ICU
- Cardiac death declared after 5 minute observation
period - Organ recovery begins after declaration of death
73National Increase in DCD Donors 2006 vs. 2005
- Donor Increase 15.5
- Organs Recovered Increase 14.9
- Organs Transplanted Increase 24.0
- Organs Transplanted per Donor
- 2006 2.11
- 2005 1.97
- 13 DSAs saw a decrease in DCD donors recovered
8.0 to 80.0 - 6 DSA saw no change
- 29 DSAs saw an increase 2.0 to 600.0
- (These categories include only DSAs with at least
one DCD donor recovered in both 2005 and 2006) - 54 DSAs have recovered at least 1 DCD donor in
2006 - Range 1 to 66
74Donation After Brain and Cardiac
DeathUniversity of Wisconsin Experience
75Number of Transplants from DCD DonorsUniversity
of Wisconsin
- Type of Transplant Number of Transplants
- Kidney (1984) 602
- Liver (1993) 71
- Pancreas (1993) 54Lung (1993)
24
-
- Total Transplants 751
76Hospital Perspective
- Jeannine Zuba, Neuro Trauma ICU Manager
- Amy Kroos, RN
- Victoria Farkas, RN
- OSF Saint Anthony Medical Center
- Rockford, IL
77Path to Donation after Cardiac Death
- BSN student leadership project
- Capture patient population with poor prognosis
but did not progress to brain death - Collaborative Conference educated and inspired
- JCAHO standard
- Increase organ retrieval by 5
78Path to Donation after Cardiac Death
- Jan. 2006 Policy Development
- Research
- Collaboration with UW
- Jan. 2006 Aug. 2006 Multidisciplinary Team
- Nursing, UW, Trauma Physicians, Hospitalists
- OR, RT, Pastoral Care, ED, Social
Services
79Path to Donation after Cardiac Death
- April 2006 September 2006 Education
- Ethics Committee
- UWs DCD pamphlet
- Net Learning
- Poster Studies
- Mentorship Lecture
- Unit Champions
- Physician Champions
- M.D. Education
- UW Inservicing
- Policy effective September 1, 2006
80First DCD Case September 13, 2006
- 48 y/o Male Blunt Head Injury S/P Fall
- SAH, SDH, GSC 4 on arrival
- Complex medical history
- Admitted 9/12/07 0035
- DCD 9/13/07 1444
- Did not progress to Brain Death
- Consent per mother
81First DCD Case September 13, 2006
- Family did not accompany patient to the OR
- OPO arrived at facility at 1230 on 9/13/07
- OPO supported team effort throughout procedure
- Patient expired within 5 minutes of extubation
- Organs recovered
- Both Kidneys
- Liver
- Pancreas islets
82After Action Review 9/15/06
- What went well?
- OPO coming early to prepare
- Teamwork
- M.D. cooperation
- OR staff
- Prayer by chaplain in OR
- Amy and Jeannine on-site
- Excellent Education
- Professional demeanor
- Rapport and care for family
83After Action Review 9/15/06
- Opportunities for improvement
- R.T. education (October 11, 2006)
- Improve time when M.D. needed for declaration
- Labs were not done within 6 hours of incision
- Noteworthy
- DCD tool not completed due to respiratory status
- Organ Procurement technique surprise to staff
84Positive Result from DCD
- Organ Donation Committee
- Professional growth
- Provided additional options for families staff
- Increased relationship with OPO
- Multi-disciplinary relationships
85Organ Tissue Donation Beyond
- Continued Education
- First Person Requestor Training
- Donor Management Education
- Ancillary education
- Algorhythms
- Monitor Quality Improvement
- Increase hospital and community awareness
86- Effective Question for the Audience
- Dennis Wagner
87- Question to run on
- What is the actionable insight
- you are taking from these best practice
presentations?
88DSA Recognition
89Hospitals Recognized for High Conversion Rates
- Overall, 25 out of 29 hospitals in the DSA
achieved the national goal of a 75 conversion
rate!
90Data Collection
- Data collection was for rolling 12-month periods
between January 2005 and February 2007. The
following hospitals achieved a 75 conversion
rate - Adjusted Conversion Rate The number of actual
donors divided by the number of eligible donors.
DCD donors are added to both the numerator and
denominator.
91Agnesian HealthcareSt. Agnes HospitalFond du
Lac
92Appleton Medical Center
93Aspirus Wausau Hospital
94Aurora Baycare Medical CenterGreen Bay
95Aurora Medical CenterOshkosh
96Beaver Dam Community Hospital
97Beloit Memorial Hospital
98Fort HealthCareFort Atkinson
99Franciscan Skemp Health CareLa Crosse
100Gundersen Lutheran Medical CenterLa Crosse
101Luther HospitalEau Claire
102Marquette General Hospital
103Mercy Health SystemJanesville
104Mercy Medical CenterOshkosh
105Meriter HospitalMadison
106OSF Saint Anthony Medical CenterRockford
107Riverview Hospital AssociationWisconsin Rapids
108Sacred Heart HospitalEau Claire
109St. Josephs HospitalMarshfield
110St. Marys Hospital Medical CenterGreen Bay
111St. Marys Hospital Medical CenterMadison
112St. Vincent HospitalGreen Bay
113Swedish American HospitalRockford
114Theda Clark Medical CenterNeenah
115University of Wisconsin Hospital and
ClinicsMadison
116Congratulations for Your Life-Saving Work!
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118Large Hospitals Winning Medals of Honor for 75
Rates
- May, 2005 185
- October, 2006 371
119Your Donation Service Area Wins Major National
Award
120The Wait of a Lifetime