Title: ACHSE 48th Residential Conference March 2002
1ACHSE 48th Residential ConferenceMarch 2002
- Leadership and the Quality Challenge - the
National Perspective - Heather Wellington
- Member, Australian Council for Safety Quality
in Health Care
2Current Context of Health Care
- expanding health wants
- limited resources
- cost containment
- greater clinical accountability
- expanding technology and demographic changes
- workforce pressures
3Health System Activity
- 19 million people
- 209.566 million Medicare services (1999/2000)
- 5,563,074 hospital separations (in 1997-98)
- day surgery increase from 7 (1980) to 55
- high doctor / population ratio
- very high bed usage
4Economic Improvement
- we are doing more with less
- expenditure all health services
- 7.5 (1985/86) - 8.4 (1997/98) of G.D.P.
- number of services increased by 30
- productivity savings (anaesthesia and surgery) 4
billion/year over 20 years - (Access Economics)
5Adverse Event
- an incident in which harm resulted to a person
receiving health care - may include
- complications of diagnosis or treatment
- misadventure
- mistakes - slips and lapses
- errors - latent, active, omission,
- commission, systems, individual
6Adverse Events
- 10 of admissions associated with adverse events
- 50 of adverse events are severe
- 50 are preventable
- most common adverse events
- wound infection
- adverse drug events
- falls and pressure sores
7Unsafe Care is Costly
- inappropriate use of drugs results in 80,000
admissions / year and costs 350 million - adverse drug events 10-20 of all adverse
events - ten years wrong side / wrong site surgery one
days adverse drug events - total cost of unsafe care 1 2 billion /year
8The Safety Message
- Safety is the most important dimension of quality
for patients and their families - Consumers arent interested in your journey to
quality. They want safe hospitals, they dont
want to meet you at the beginning of your
journey. - Consumer Advocate
9The Safety Message
- the health system delivers safe care for the
majority of patients - the challenge is to move from 90 reliability to
100 - everyone can focus on safety
10Complexity a Major Hazard
- 25 component system that functions properly 99
of the time - probability of whole system functioning perfectly
is 78 - with 50 elements, 61
11Many Competing Priorities
- You ponce in here expecting to be waited on hand
and foot, well, Im trying to run a hotel here.
Have you any idea of how much there is to do? Do
you ever think of that? Of course not, youre
all too busy sticking your noses into every
corner, poking around for things to complain
about, arent you? - Basil Fawlty (aka John Cleese)
12Accident Enquiries Suggest
- bad events more likely the result of error prone
situations rather than error prone people - the best people can make the worst errors
13Organisational Accidents
- Error prone people do exist but seldom remain at
the hazardous, sharp end for very long. Quite
often, they get promoted to management! - James Reason
14Systems Focus Essential
- currently focus on the individual rather than the
system - medical culture personalises error
- the public, the media and the courts perpetuate
the focus on the individual
15Systems Focus Essential
- individual integrity and competence are
important, but an emphasis on systems improvement
is is critical
16Where We Need to do Better
- identify and manage risks - knowledge based
improvement - design for safety - reduce complexity
- encourage and reward improvement and innovation
- teams not individuals
- greater openness in
- assessing performance and outcomes
- dealing with mishaps and system failures
17Councils Role
- Councils Role is to lead and co-ordinate
national efforts to promote systemic improvements
in the safety and quality of health care in
Australia, with a particular focus on minimising
the likelihood and effects of error.
18Making Change Happen
- setting a national agenda for change
- the National Action Plan
- building ownership through collaboration
- links and working parties
- developing and strengthening national standards
- support for implementation
- tools for frontline clinicians and managers
- promoting the patients role in safety
19Health Care Safety Net Core Standards in Key
Areas
Review and Action on Patient Deaths
Reduced Patient Falls
Health Care Acquired Infection
National Audits, Registers and Benchmarks
Open Disclosure in place
International Lessons Learnt
Integrated Risk Management Improved
accreditation
Improved Medication Safety
Qualified Privilege Reformed
States Territories Involved
Safe Patient Care
Glossary of Safety Terms
Education, Systems Safety Human Factors,
Communication
National Standards for Credentialling
Consumer Needs Understood
Alerts from Trends in Coronial Data
National Standards for Incident Monitoring
Specialist Vocational Registers
20Safety Innovations in Practice Programme
- to encourage innovation and excellence in
practice - value up to 10,000 / project
- new projects
- not clinical research
21Safety Innovations in Practice Programme
- Projects 65 funded from 225 applications,
564,000 - Examples
- ACT better utilisation of interpreter services
- NSW reducing over-sedation in endoscopy
patients - NT systems approach to medication error
- QLD automated computerised discharge advice
sheets - SA changing hand washing behaviour
- VIC communicating for calm, reducing aggressive
behaviour - WA evaluation and redesign of nursing
assessments and care planning documentation
22Medication Safety Taskforce
- 2nd National Report on Patient Safety
- focused on medication safety
- Medication Safety Collaborative
- 5 million tenders closed 11.2.2002
- high risk drugs identified
- actions planned
- workshop early 2002
- I.T. support and electronic prescribing
nationally compatible systems
23What Do We Want From Our Medication Safety
Programme?
- reduced harm by focusing surveillance analysis
and action on harm not errors - provide tools for doctors, nurses, pharmacists
and other clinicians to improve safety - redesign systems of
- prescribing
- dispensing
- delivery
- increase patient knowledge and involvement
24Open Disclosure Initiative
- 450,000 tender awarded December 2001
- key deliverables
- conduct a review of legal issues
- develop national standards
- provide education and organisational support
packages - completion date 2002
25Open Disclosure Standards
Need to balance stakeholders interests
- candour
- openness
- transparency
- cautious information sharing
- factual uncertainty
- high emotion
- legitimate legal interest
Vs
26Sentinel Event Incident Monitoring
- nationally consistent specifications
- collaborative discussion across states
- lists of sentinel events
- reporting / analysis systems
- implementation of preventative action
- sentinel event criteria for inclusion
- causes serious harm
- indicates likely systems failure
- has capacity to undermine public confidence
- clearly identifiable
27Conferences and Surveys
- Nov. 2000 5th Australian Aviation Psychology
Seminar - April 2001 Survey of Health Care Professionals
- May 2001 with Consumer Focus Collaboration
- National Consumer Consultative
Conference and Workshop - Sept. 2000 1st Asia Pacific Forum on Quality
Improvement in Health Care
28System-wide Changes to Structures and Processes
- accreditation core standards / risk management
- credentialling includes performance review
- registration specialist / vocational, requires
C.P.D. and revalidation - qualified privilege reporting
- National Implantable Device Register
29System-wide Changes to Structures and Processes
- curriculum development and educational strategies
on systems safety, human factors and
communication - enhanced national morbidity and mortality data
sets includes coronial reports - national audits in priority areas to provide
benchmarks
30Opportunities from the Safety Agenda
- better structures
- more support
- a chance to fix problems we have already
recognised - better use of physical and financial resources
- clinicians involved in
- setting the health agenda
- creating the future system
31What Will Success Look Like?
- patient centred safety and quality values are
paramount - leaders are identified and nurtured
- systems are being continuously redesigned for
improvement - tools to make the necessary changes are available
- measurable improvement in safety and
- quality
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