Title: Building a Preventive Ethics Program
1Building a Preventive Ethics Program
Mary Beth Foglia RN PhD MA IntegratedEthics
Manager Preventive Ethics, and Senior Staff,
Ethics Evaluation Group National Center for
Ethics in Health Care (VHA)
Catholic Health East August 5, 2009
2Learning objectives
- Describe IntegratedEthics model
- Identify key elements of Preventive Ethics
- Describe how to get started in developing a
preventive ethics approach
3What Is IntegratedEthics?
- A national education and organizational change
initiative - A comprehensive, systematic approach to ethics in
health care
4Perceived Quality Gaps
- Lack of adequate training 96
- Lack of a systematic approach 88
- Ethics program not well integrated 80
- Ethics program lacks standards 71
- Ethics program not improvement-oriented 68
- Ethics program too narrowly focused 64
- Ethics program not data-driven 64
- Lack of leadership support/accountability 60
5The IntegratedEthics Model
6What Is Ethics Quality?
Systemsand processes
Environmentand culture
7Three Core Functions
- Ethics Consultation
- Responding to ethics questions in health care
- The CASES Approach
- Preventive Ethics
- Addressing ethics quality gaps on a systems level
- The ISSUES Approach
- Ethical Leadership
- Fostering an ethical environment and culture
- The Four Compass points
8Three Core Functions
Preventive Ethics
Ethical Leadership
9Domains of ethics in health care
- Shared decision making with patients
- Ethical practices in end-of-life care
- Patient privacy and confidentiality
- Professionalism in patient care
- Ethical practices in resource allocation
-
10Domains of ethics continued
- Ethical practices in business and management
- Ethical practices in government service
- Ethical practices in research
- Ethical practices in the everyday workplace
- IntegratedEthics program
11Introduction to Preventive Ethics
12Preventive ethics defined
Activities performed by an individual or group on
behalf of a health care organization to identify,
prioritize, and address systemic ethics issues
13Goal of Preventive Ethics
- Produce measurable and sustainable improvements
in an organizations ethics practices
14What is an Ethics Quality Gap?
- Difference between best practice and current
practice - Difference between what staff ought to do and
what staff is doing
Preventive ethics seeks to reduce gaps through a
quality improvement approach
Preventive ethics (PE) seeks to reduce gaps
through a quality improvement approach
15Preventive Ethics Reduces Variation in Ethics
Practices
16PE Promotes Organizational Justice
- Treat equals equally and unequals unequally
From Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics. translated
by Weldon, J.E.C. Prometheus Books (Buffalo,
NY1987).
16
17Key assumptions of preventive ethics
- Traditional case-based ethics consultation
services dont address systems-level obstacles to
ethical practices - Developing individual virtue through training and
education alone cant ensure ethical practice
18Key assumptions of Preventive Ethics continued
- The primary causes of ethics quality gaps lie in
organizational systems and processesnot the
behavior of individuals - Ethical practices in health care can be measured
and improved
19Introduction to ISSUES
20ISSUES approach to reducing ethics quality gaps
- Identify an issue
- Study the issue
- Select a strategy
- Undertake a plan
- Evaluate and adjust
- Sustain and spread
21ISSUES approach to reducing ethics quality gaps
overview
- A systematic, step-by-step process to narrow the
gap between best practice and current
practice - Marries principles and methods of quality
improvement with principles and methods of
ethical analysis - Targets the systems and processes that influence
ethical practices in a facility
22Crosswalk ISSUES and FOCUS-PDSA
ISSUES FOCUS-PDSA
Identify an issue Find an opportunity for
improvement (Core team ad hoc members) Organize
a team Study the issue Clarify processes and
problems Select a strategy Understand root
causes Select a strategy Select
improvement Undertake a plan Plan Undertake a
plan Do Evaluate and adjust Study Sustain and
spread Act
23Indications for PE Examples from the Field
24Shared Decision Making
- Examples
- Advance directives of dialysis patients are not
accurate, or updated - Advance care planning is not addressed in primary
care - Advance care planning processes do not include
elicitation of mental health treatment
preferences - Electronic informed consent is not utilized
- Gurney consent is obtained for non-emergent
cases - Organ donation screening practices are
inconsistent with policy
25Professionalism
- Examples
- Patients discharged AMA are denied follow-up
appointments, discharge medicines and discharge
instructions - Adverse events are not consistently reported,
disclosed or documented in the health record
26Resource Allocation
- Examples
- Practice of Discharge by noon results in
avoidable readmissions, burdensome rework, and
patient dissatisfaction - TCU patients requiring/requesting palliative care
are transferred to ED and then to inpatient care - The process for referring Veterans for services
outside of VHA is inconsistent and perceived to
be arbitrary and unfair - Care processes for difficult patients are
inconsistent and lack coordination
27End-of-Life
- Examples
- Process to address requests for portable Do Not
Attempt Resuscitation (DNAR) orders is lacking - Processes for eliciting patient preferences and
goals of care are inconsistent resulting in
futile care - Attending physicians routinely disapprove
requests for ethics and palliative care consults - Clinical warnings (CWAD) are inconsistently
updated leading to staff mistrust of DNAR status
28Everyday Workplace
- Examples
- Inconsistencies exist in emergency-related
facility closures/time and leave policies across
VISN causing staff and labor partners moral
distress (unfair and arbitrary)
29Privacy and Confidentiality
- Examples
- Food service workers note that personal food
items (food brought in for patients by
family/friends) are labeled with full name, DOB
and social security number
30Select Outcomes
31Select Outcomes
32Select Outcomes
33Select Outcomes
34Select Outcomes
35Getting Started
36Models of Organizing PE
- Core function of IntegratedEthics program
- Reports to facility leadership through the
IntegratedEthics facility council - Part of Ethics Program
- Subcommittee of organizational ethics with strong
linkages to ethics consultation - Part of Quality Management Program
37Assembling your team Get the Right People
- Core members
- PE coordinator with dedicated time
- Team members
- Responsible for ongoing work of PE function
- Ad hoc members
- Issue specific
- Time-limited commitment
- Most often content or process experts and owners
38Proficiencies required to perform PE
- Quality improvement principles, methods, and
practices - Numeric or statistical (basic) literacy
- Working knowledge of health care delivery
system systems thinking - Knowledge of routine data sources to identify
ethics quality gaps and baseline measures - Ability to use or develop data tracking tools
39Proficiencies continued
- Practical grasp of how to promote sustained
organizational change - Knowledge of common ethics topics and concepts
- Skill in moral reasoning
40IE Performance Measures Preventive Ethics
- Measure of Success FY10
- Preventive Ethics
- Each facility, with input from the IE Council,
will complete a minimum of 2 preventive ethics QI
cycles - Each Network will address at least one Network
wide cross-cutting issue identified through IE
resources (e.g., Facility Workbooks, IE Staff
Survey, QI logs, ECWeb reports, recurrent cases)
41Award Programs/Leadership Mandates
- Prioritize high priority and cross cutting ethics
quality gaps - Teams chartered to address ethics quality gap
- Disseminate results to foster an organizational
learning environment
42Contact Us
- www.ethics.va.gov
- Download publicly available materials
- Mary Beth Foglia
- Preventive Ethics Manager
- marybeth.foglia_at_va.gov
- (206) 277-5121
43Questions?