Title: Disseminating Health Care Innovations
1Disseminating Health Care Innovations
2Research Base and Health Care
- Best Drugs
- Best Surgical strategies
- Best Diagnostic strategies
- Proven Clinical Guidelines
3The Majority of this Scientific Knowledge remains
unused!
- As stated in the Institute of Medicine report
Crossing the Quality Chasm - Between the health care we have and the care we
could have lies not just a gap, but a chasm.
4Failing to use available science is
- Costly and harmful
- Leads to overuse of unhelpful care
- Under use of effective care
- and, errors in execution of care
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5Results in Patient Safety
- Serious medication errors occur in 7 out of 100
hospitalizations - 80,000 unnecessary hysterectomies/year
- 500,000 unnecessary Cesarean deliveries/year
- 1 in 5 elderly myocardial infarction survivors
receives appropriate medications to prevent a
reoccurance.
6Patient Safety NEJM/June 26, 2003
- Patients received half of the recommended
processes involved in the care of their chronic
conditions. - These processes where closely correlated to
preventable death or disability. For example,
64 of the elderly participants received a
pneumococcal vaccine. Nearly 10,000 deaths could
be avoided annually with this vaccine.
7Diffusions of InnovationsEverett Rogers
- Perceptions of the innovation
- Characteristics of the people who adopt the
innovation - Contextual factors, especially involving
communication, incentives, leadership, and
management.
8Perceived benefits of the change.
- Most likely to adopt if it benefits me
- Risk vs. gain
- To diffuse rapidly, it must be compatible with
values, beliefs, past history/ training. - Why reduce C-section rates if they are clinically
acceptable and they reduced malpractice exposure? - The rate of diffusion is directly correlated to
the complexity of the proposed innovation.
9Adopters of change
- Innovators in healthcare are considered weird
or incautious, or may be heavily invested in a
specialized topic. - Early adopters leaders of clinical groups, very
social, watched by others. - Early Majority they need innovations to meet
their immediate needs, not just be interesting. - Late Majority Is it safe yet? Adopted only
after local adoption. - Laggards I have always done it like that.
10Rule 1 Find Sound Innovations
- Health care is well published. Use it.
- (but who is paying attention?)
- Restraint Reduction Initiative
11Rule 2 Find and Support Innovators
- Novel ideas most frequently come from those not
imbedded in the system. - Warning! They can be abrasive, not invested in
the local networks, and demanding of latitude.
12Rule 3 Invest in Early Adopters
- Internal nurse/champions
- Need slack time and resources to try out new
things and to reduce their uncertainty through
small scale trails
13Rule 4 Make it possible to observe the early
adopters.
- Case presentation (how to apply the innovations,
how did it work, let the early majority learn
from their mistakes.
14Rule 5 Trust and enable Reinvention
- Take this great idea and make it work here!
Recognize it will not look the same at the
implementation point.
15Rule 6 Create room for change
- Time
- Money
- Energy
- Emotional support
16What do we need?
- Easy retrieval of patient information
- IT systems that integrate patient data and are
constantly updated, minute by minute. - Health information report cards available and
readable to the public. - Establishing a national baseline for performance
of health care and - Hold providers of care accountable.
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