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Its Not Mad Cow Disease

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Title: Its Not Mad Cow Disease


1
Its Not Mad Cow Disease
Presented by Peg OKeefe Director, Corporate
Communications Exempla Healthcare Denver,
Colorado Society for Healthcare Strategy and
Market Development Eighth Annual Education
Conference Hot Topics-T 16 September 4, 2003
2
  • What happens
  • when a rare but always fatal
  • infectious brain disorder
  • is discovered in your hospital?

3
Which ethical principles drive your
communications responsibility to the patients
when risk of transmission is theoretical only,
the onset perhaps 20 years out, and patients are
over 60 years of age?
4
How do you handle communications to internal and
external audiences when the issue lends itself to
misunderstanding and sensationalism?
5
Thus begins a saga with legal, ethical,
communications and professional implications
and results that include the development of a
policy distributed by the JCAHO as the national
standard.
6
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)
  • Rare, fatal brain disorder
  • Causes rapid, progressive dementia and
    neuromuscular disturbances
  • Occurs in one in a million people a year

7
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)
  • 85 cases occur sporadically--no known cause
  • 5-15 of cases are inherited
  • Can be transmitted through direct contact with
    infected neural tissue (human pituitary derived
    growth hormone, dura mater transplant)
  • Two confirmed cases of transmission in mid-70s in
    France used stereotactic electrodes that were
    gas sterilized.

8
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)
  • Cannot be transmitted by casual contact, blood or
    organ donation, only by the prions from a patient
    with CJD touching the nervous system tissue of
    another patient
  • No diagnostic test nor treatment known at this
    time

9
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)
  • Most scientists believe the transmissible agent
    is neither a virus nor previously known
    infectious agent, but rather an unconventional
    agent consisting of protein.
  • Prion short for proteinaceous infectious
    particle

10
Prions
  • Transform normal, benign protein molecules into
    infectious, deadly ones by altering the shape of
    the healthy molecules
  • Produce microscopic holes in the brain that
    appear sponge-like

11
Suspected prion-caused diseases
  • Animals
  • Scrapie (sheep and goats)
  • Chronic Wasting Disease (mule deer and elk)
  • Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (mad cow disease)
  • Humans
  • Kuru
  • Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker
  • Familial insomnia

12
What happened?
13
The events
  • Brain biopsy performed on a patient with symptoms
    of dementiasuspected diagnosis vasculitis
    (which is treatable)
  • Hospital learns through pathology reports that
    the patient had CJD

14
The hospital
  • Contacts State Health Department and CDC
  • Removes surgical instruments from service
  • State-of-the-art tracking system in place
  • Reviews sterilization practices
  • Contacts other hospitals (locally and nationally)
    seeking practices and protocolsnone can be found

15
Concerns
  • Potential anxiety of patients exposed to
    instruments used during brain biopsy
  • Physicians and employees concerns
  • Public concern

16
Procedure review
  • Instrument tracking system in place was
    state-of-the art
  • Sterile processing met or exceeded clinical
    standards
  • Infection control for disposal issues in place
    and followed
  • Reprocessing guidelines in place and followed

17
Regulatory agency response
  • Colorado Department of Public Health and
    Environment notified, consulted, invited to
    decision meetings
  • Acted in advisory role
  • No public health issues
  • CDC Advisory
  • NIH Advisory

18
Communication challenges
19
Internal Audiences
  • Tools
  • Fact Sheet
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Talking Points
  • Responsibility Chart
  • Tracking List

20
Internal Audiences
  • Nursing supervisors, Managers, Employees
  • Inservice meetings, letters, talking points
  • Messages
  • No employees or physicians at risk
  • Not mad cow disease
  • You are our best source of information

21
Internal Audiences
  • Physicians/Medical Staff
  • Coordination with Kaiser-Permanente
  • Meeting with primary care physicians and
    neurosurgeons regarding the CJD notification
    process
  • Medical Executive Committee

22
Internal Audiences
  • Hospital Board
  • Foundation Board
  • Volunteers

23
Patients and Families
  • Identify patients who were exposed to the
    surgical instrument sets
  • Communicate with physicians
  • Letter to patients scheduled for surgery

24
Patients and Families
  • Ethical principles
  • Beneficence
  • Autonomy
  • Honesty
  • Confidentiality

25
Patients and Families
  • Ethical dilemma
  • Possible contact with CJD prions
  • Potential benefits for patients
  • Right to know
  • Potential burdens
  • Anxiety

26
Patients and Families
  • Helping physicians talk to patients
  • Coordinate talking points with Kaiser Permanente
    communications staff
  • On-going tracking

27
When the story broke
  • Television coverage
  • Video clips
  • Follow-up calls to correct misinformation
  • Thank you letters

28
When the story broke
  • Print Coverage
  • Editorial Boards
  • Developing relationships
  • Building local expertise

29
JCAHO
  • Letter of inquiry sent to hospital media knew
    before the letter was received
  • Eventually published our findings in a Sentinel
    Alert to all hospitals
  • National standard

30
Lessons Learned
31
Lessons learned
  • Strategy and culture must be aligned
  • Transparency is essential for dialogue
  • Safety is a system property
  • Leadership is essential
  • Risk, fear and insecurity can be overcome

32
Lessons learned
  • Culture of Accountability
  • Understanding not blame
  • Partnership with physicians
  • Internal relationships
  • Accurate Information

33
Lessons learned
  • Power of Systems
  • Instrument tracking
  • Quick response of interdisciplinary teams
  • Involvement of appropriate committees
  • Communications at the table

34
Lessons learned
  • Value of Transparency
  • Honest communications with patients
  • Share lessons with other hospitals
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