Title: Patient safety, clinical governance and risk management
1Patient safety, clinical governance and risk
management
- Stuart Emslie
- WHO consultant to KKM
2Stuart Emslie
- Former academic, Strathclyde University,
Scotland, specialising in healthcare risk
management - Formerly Head of Controls Assurance for the
National Health Service in England, Dept. of
Health - Currently independent healthcare consultant
specialising in healthcare governance, risk
management and patient safety - World Health Organisation (WHO) consultant on
clinical governance, risk management patient
safety to Malaysian Ministry of Health - Visiting Fellow in healthcare governance and risk
management at Loughborough University, England
developed and leads part-time MSc degree in
healthcare governance - Visiting Lecturer, clinical governance, Oxford
University Medical School, England - Visiting Lecturer, risk management clinical
governance, Flinders University School of
Medicine, Australia (China Singapore) - Advisor on clinical governance to Health Service
Executive, Ireland
3Objectives
- Understand clinical governance (including
patient safety and risk management) - Explore the Irish framework for integrated
quality, safety and risk management as a means
of achieving excellence in clinical governance - Determine whether the Irish framework might be
worthy of adoption by KKM for public hospitals in
Malaysia and what modifications to the framework
would be required.
4www.ministryofhealth.wordpress.com
5(No Transcript)
6MYR 75 billion - - - gt100,000 employees
7- Medicine used to be simple, ineffective and
relatively safe. Now it is complex, effective and
potentially dangerous. - Sir Cyril Chantler
- Former Dean
- Guys St Thomass
- Medical Dental School
- London
8Technology Development and Risk in Healthcare
Technology Development
Development
Risk Gap
Training
Time
c2001
c1980
c1950
Source Chris Quinn, Newcastle Hospitals NHS
Trust, England
9(No Transcript)
10UK blunders by doctors kill 40,000 a
yearSunday Times, 19 Dec 1999
Medical error is the third most frequent cause
of death in Britain after cancer and heart
disease.kills four times more people than die
from all other types of accidents.
NB USA approx. 98,000/year Australia approx.
10,000/year
11Hospital condemned over deaths after 'appalling'
failures in careHealth secretary apologises over
damning report on Mid Staffordshire NHS trust
- Between 400 and 1,200 more people died than
would have been expected at Mid Staffordshire NHS
foundation trust over three years. - Although it is not clear how many of these deaths
could have been avoided, the Healthcare
Commission said patients undoubtedly suffered as
a result of lapses in the standard of care.
17 March 2009
12Mirror.co.uk NEWS
13Examples
- Aintree Hospital a tube that was helping the
patient breathe dislodged, causing a fatal heart
attack and in separate incident a chest drain
being inserted to relieve pressure on the lungs
pierced the heart with horrific consequences - Death of a patient at York given the wrong
medication - A missed diagnosis of meningitis led to a childs
death at East Kent Trust - At the Royal Hampshire County Hospital 23
patients died of C.diff - Five babies on the neo-natal unit contracted MRSA
at Winchester and Eastleigh - A swab was left inside a patients abdomen after
a caesarean last June at Queen Marys Sidcup NHS
Trust - At East Cheshire NHS Trust a patient had the
wrong part of their body operated on - etc.
14From www.healthcaregovernance.info
15(No Transcript)
16Study Year No hospitals No case records Incidence AEs Incidence prev AEs Type of study
California 1975 24 20864 4.6 0.78 Insurance
NY State 1984 51 30121 3.8 0.95 Malpractice
Utah-Colorado 1992 28 14700 2.9 0.93 Compare NY
Australia (Vict./S.Aust) 1993 31 14179 16.6 8.4 Quality
U.K. (London) 1999 2 1014 10.8 5.2 Feasibility
Denmark 2000 17 1097 9.0 3.6 Pilot
N. Z. (Auckland) 2000 3 1326 10.7 4.3 Feasibility
Canada (Ottawa) 2002 20 3745 7.5 2.8 Quality
France (Aquitaine) 2002 7 778 14.5 4.0 Quality
8.9
3.4
Average
17(No Transcript)
18Doctors v. Gun Owners
- Number of physicians in the US 700,000
- Accidental deaths caused by physicians/year
98,000 - Accidental deaths/physician per year 0.14
- Number of gun owners in US 80,000,000
- Number of accidental gun deaths/year 1500
- Accidental deaths/gun owner .0000188
- ?Conclusion - Doctors are approximately 7500
times more dangerous than gun owners!
19(No Transcript)
20(No Transcript)
21Why do doctors kill more people than
airline pilots? Airline pilots are required to
have time off to sleep, do everything in
duplicate and follow protocols. British Medical
Journal Vol 1 317 1998
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS
- Improving the safety and quality of care by
investigating and analysing incidents and issues
to determine what went wrong, why, and the
actions necessary to prevent recurrence
25www.jcaho.org
26Improvement strategies that punish
individual clinicians are misguided and do not
work. Fixing dysfunctional systems on the other
hand is the work that needs to be done Saul
Weingart, Harvard Executive, Session on Medical
Error and Patient Safety
27Bristol Royal Infirmary
In the period from 1991 to 1995 between 30 and
35 more children under 1 died after open-heart
surgery in the Bristol unit than might be
expected had the unit been typical of other PCS
units in England at the time.
28Clinical Governance
- A framework through which NHS organisations are
accountable for continually improving the quality
of their services and safeguarding high standards
of care by creating an environment in which
excellence in clinical care will flourish.
the framework through which organisations
influence the informal psychological and social
functioning of their staff.
29- "Clinical governance is the vital ingredient
which will enable us to achieve a Health Service
in which the quality of health care is paramount.
The best definition that I have seen of clinical
governance is simply that it means "corporate
accountability for clinical performance".
Clinical governance will not replace professional
self regulation and individual clinical
judgement, concepts that lie at the heart of
health care in this country. But it will add an
extra dimension that will provide the public with
guarantees about standards of clinical care." - Dr Sam Galbraith MPMinister for Health
(Scotland)June 1998
30www.nao.gov.uk
31and clinical decision-making based on up-to-date
evidence of effectiveness
Including staff continuing professional developme
nt (CPD)
Source Based on National Audit Office
32(No Transcript)
33(No Transcript)
34(No Transcript)
35Personal Work
- Read the Framework document, have a restful sleep
and good breakfast, and come prepared tomorrow
morning to do a self-assessment against the
Framework document as a basis for moving forward
over the next 2 days.