Rhonda A. Sparks, M.D. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 36
About This Presentation
Title:

Rhonda A. Sparks, M.D.

Description:

Rhonda A. Sparks, M.D. Medical Director Clinical Skills Education and Testing Center University of Oklahoma College of Medicine * * * * * * * * * * * Typical OKC ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:43
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 37
Provided by: ohcwcComC
Category:
Tags: rhonda | sparks

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Rhonda A. Sparks, M.D.


1
Multidisciplinary SimulationMoving Clinical
EducationfromGroup Training to Team Training
  • Rhonda A. Sparks, M.D.
  • Medical Director
  • Clinical Skills Education and Testing Center
  • University of Oklahoma College of Medicine

2
Where are we going?
  • Why is the time right for change in clinical
    education?
  • What are the obstacles to instituting
    multidisciplinary simulation?
  • How can we design the most effective
    multidisciplinary simulation activities?

3
Time for ChangeThe Perfect Storm
4
Time for Change
  • Changes in Clinical Education
  • Curriculum Reform
  • Competency Evaluation
  • Patient Safety
  • Demand for Improved Safety and Quality
  • Healthcare Reform
  • Increased Access and Cost Containment

5
Changes in Clinical Education -How We Teach
  • Revolutions in Medical Education
  • Flexner Report 1910
  • Quackery to Credible Scientists
  • Case Western Reserve University 1952
  • Increased Integration of BS and CS
  • Increased Clinical Relevance
  • McMaster University 1969
  • Social Unrest/Time of ExperimentationEducationall
    y!
  • Canadian Universal Healthcare
  • Clinician Shortage

6
Changes in Clinical Education - What We Teach
  • 95 of Medical Schools are Expanding Class Size
  • The Nurse Education, Expansion, and Development
    Act of 2009
  • Macy Foundation 2008 - Urgent Need to Bring
    Medical Education into Better Alignment with
    Societal Needs
  • Foster greater inter-professional teamwork and
    collaboration
  • Increase curricular focus on knowledge and skills
    for improving the quality and safety of patient
    care
  • Foster inter-professional, team based education
    and patient care

7
Changes in Clinical Education Evaluation/Compete
ncy
  • Theory and Practice of Teams and Teamwork
  • Knowledge
  • Skills
  • Attitudes
  • Millers Pyramid of Competency
  • Knows - information
  • Knows How to use information
  • Shows how to use information
  • Does performs in clinical setting

8
Changes in Physician Culture 1910 - 2010
  • The 21st Century Physician
  • Acquire and Use Knowledge
  • Interdisciplinary Research
  • Collaborative
  • Share Accountability
  • Interdisciplinary Teams
  • Coordination of Care
  • The 20th Century Physician
  • Accumulate Knowledge
  • Individual Scholarly Work
  • Autonomous
  • Cooperative
  • Individual Achievements
  • Solo Expert

9
Patient Safety
  • 1999 Institute of Medicine Report To Err is
    Human Building a Safer Health System
  • Medical Error 8th Leading Cause of Death
  • 99,000 Deaths Annually
  • Non-technical Errors
  • System Errors
  • 7 Inpatients subjected to a medical error
  • Cost 8 to 29 Billion Annually

10
Patient Safety
  • 1999 - AHRQ directed by the Healthcare Research
    and Quality Act to
  • Identify the causes of preventable health care
    errors and patient injury in health care delivery
  • Develop, demonstrate, and evaluate strategies for
    reducing errors and improving patient safety
  • Disseminate effective strategies throughout the
    health care industry

11
Patient Safety
  • 2003 JCAHO National Patient Safety Goals
  • 3 of 7 Goals Non-technical skills
  • Instituted Safety Practices
  • Clinical Effectiveness of Safe Practices
  • 2004 The 100K Lives Campaign
  • Rapid Response Teams
  • AMI Guidelines
  • Prevent Adverse Drug Events (ADE)
  • Prevent Central Line Infections
  • 2005 Resident Work Hour Limits

12
Patient Safety
  • 2005 Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Act
  • Patient Safety Organizations (PSO)
  • Limits Use of Reported Adverse Event Information
  • Established a Network of Patient Safety Databases
    (NPSD)
  • 2005 TeamSTEPPS
  • 2006 Keystone Project
  • Team Approach to Decreasing Line Infections

13
Patient Safety
  • 2006 AHRQ Improving Patient Safety through
    Simulation Research Grants
  • 2008 CDC Data Suggests that HAIs effect 2
    million patients
  • 2008 Project RED Re-Engineered Hospital
    Discharge Program
  • 2009 PSOs Refined and Consumer Avenue for
    Reporting Developed

14
(No Transcript)
15
Healthcare Reform
  • H.R. 3590 - Patient Protection and Affordable
    Care Act 3/23/2010
  • Expand health care coverage to 31 million
    currently uninsured Americans through a
    combination of cost controls, subsidies and
    mandates.
  • It is estimated to cost 848 billion over a 10
    year period, but would be fully offset by new
    taxes and revenues and would actually reduce the
    deficit by 131 billion over the same period
  • What will this look like?
  • Increase Access - Yes

16
Healthcare Reform
  • Beginning in October 2012, non-rural acute care
    hospitals that meet or exceed performance
    standards established by the Secretary of Health
    and Human Services (HHS) for at least five
    measures will receive higher Medicare payments
    from a pool of money collected from all hospitals
  • Starting in October 2012, hospitals with high
    readmission rates for patients with these
    conditions will have their Medicare payments
    reduced

17
How Effective is Team Training?
  • What we know
  • Microsystems over a define period of time
  • What we dont know
  • Long-term outcomes

18
(Sexton, 2006) Johns Hopkins
(Pronovost, 2003) Johns Hopkins Journal of
Critical Care Medicine
(Mann, 2006) Beth Israel Deaconess Medical
Center Contemporary OB/GYN
19
What are the obstacles to wider utilization of
multidisciplinary simulation?
  • Change is Hard
  • Culture of Silos
  • Culture of Innovation
  • Lack of Transparency
  • Error reporting systems

20
Making It Work
  • Utilize Group Training for Tasks
  • Define Our Teams
  • Micro-environments
  • Use Patient Safety Data to Drive Team Training
    Initiatives
  • Clearly Define Team Objectives
  • Use Established Team Training Methodology
  • TeamSTEPPS

21
TeamSTEPPS
  • Department of Defense DoD and AHRQ
  • Research Based and Field Tested (MHS)
  • Four Core Competency Areas
  • Team Leadership
  • Situation Monitoring
  • Mutual Support
  • Communication

22
Eight Stepsof Change
John Kotter
Team Strategies Tools to Enhance Performance
Patient Safety
23
(No Transcript)
24
(No Transcript)
25
We can assure our patients that their care is
always provided by a team of experts, but we
cannot assure our patients that their care is
always provided by expert teams
  • Allan S. Frankel, M.D.

26
Tulsa
Yall come back now, ya hear?
Oklahoma City
27
Tulsa High Rise
28
OKC High Rise
29
Yacht on Grand Lake
30
Yacht on Lake Hefner - OKC
31
Tulsa Speed Boat
32
OKC Speed Boat
33
Typical Tulsa Swimming Pool
34
Typical OKC Swimming Pool
35
Bibliography
  • Neville AJ, Norman GR. PBL in the Undergraduate
    MD Program at McMaster University Three
    Iterations in Three Decades. Acad Med.
    200782370-374
  • Morrison G, et al. Team Training of Medical
    Studnets in the 21stCenturyWould Flexner
    Approve? Acad Med. 201085254-259
  • Hamman WR. The Complexity of team training what
    we have learned from aviation and its
    applications to medicine. QualSaf Health Care.
    200413i72-i79
  • Issenberg B, et al. Features and uses of
    high-fidelity medical simulation that lead to
    effective learning a BEME Systematic Review.
    Medical Teacher. 20052710-28
  • Morey JC. Error Reduction and Performance
    Improvement in the Emergency Department through
    Formal Teamwork TrainingEvaluation Results of
    the MedTeams Project. Health Services Research.
    2002371553-1581
  • Nishisaki A, et al. Does Simulation Improve
    Patient Safety? Self-efficacy, Competence,
    Operational Performance, and Patient Safety.
    Anesthesiology Clinics. 200725225-236

36
Bibliography
  • Miller G. The Assessment of Clinical
    Skills/Competence/Performance. Acad Med. 199 63
    563-567
  • Beckett M, Fussum D, et al. A Review of Current
    State Level Adverse Event Reporting Practices
    Toward National Standards. AHRQ Report. 2007
  • LeapeL,Berwick DM. Five Years After to Err is
    Human What have We Learned?. JAMA.
    20052932384-2390
  • The Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Act of
    2005. Overview, June 2008. Agency for Healthcare
    Research and Quality, Rockville, MD.
  • http//www.ahrq.gov/qual
  • Institute of Medicine (IOM).(2000). To err is
    human Building a safer health system. L. T.
    Kohn, J. M. Corrigan, M. S. Donaldson (Eds.).
    Washington, DC National Academy Press
  • Clancy CM, Tornberg D. TeamSTEPPSIntegratingTeamw
    ork Principles into Healthcare Practice. Patient
    Safety and Quality Healthcare. 2006
    http//www.psqh.com
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com