Title: Fall Meeting
1- Fall Meeting
- AAOS
- Orthopaedic Surgery Safety Update
- 2012
- William J Robb III MD
- Chair
- AAOS Orthopaedic Surgery Safety Summit
- AAOS Patient Safety Committee
2Disclosure
- Consultant Blue Cross Blue Shield Association
- TJR - Centers of Distinction Program
- Consultant (Unpaid) - Smith and Nephew
- Investor emmi Solutions
- Chair AAOS Orthopaedic Surgery Safety Summit
- Chair AAOS Patient Safety Committee
3Is there an Orthopaedic Surgery Safety Problem
2012?MediaABC News Report - Maryland 2012
- Report on Surgical Errors
- CMS - only 14 errors reported in hospitals
- Advised patients ask about checklists
- Report
- SSIs shoulder surgery
- Wrong site pediatric eye surgery
4Is there an Orthopaedic Surgery Safety Problem
2012? HealthGrades - 2010
- gt350,000 patient safety errors/year 2006-2008
- Cost 9B
- 1/10 safety errors results deaths
- gt100,000 surgical error deaths/year
- Top 5 Hospitals only 43 reduction safety
incidents - Wrong Site Surgery (WSS) rates - 1/20,000
surgeries - Hospital SSI rates 2-3
- NO evidence safety/quality improvement 2000-2010
-
5Is there an Orthopaedic Surgery Safety problem
2012?
- JC 2009-2010
- Wrong Site/Procedure/Patient Surgery (WSS)
- Mandatory State bsed WSS Reporting
- Minnesota (48 - WSS)
- Pennsylvania (58 - WSS)
- 35.4 WSS/wk. in US (estimated)
6JC Sentinel Events Data Base 2007-2011 54
Orthopaedic WSS
7Is there a Orthopaedic Surgery Safety Problem
2012?Hospital Data JC - 2011
- gt7 wrong site/side/level/implant/procedure/patient
surgeries /day - System errors NOT Surgeon errors
- Most frequent causes
- inadequate/missing surgical information
- scheduling discrepancies/errors
- irregularities in pre-op holding process
- inadequate/absent surgical site marking
- poor communication
- distractions in OR
- inadequate/absent OR process/time-out
- Mark Chassin MD, MPP, MPH
8Is there an Orthopaedic Surgery Safety problem
2012?
- ABOS Certification/Recertification Data Base
2011 - WSS Rate - 1/30,000 orthopaedic surgeries
- NO CHANGE 2000-2011
-
9Surgical Safety/Quality/Value Timeline
- 1997 - AAOS - Sign Your Site Program - (safety)
- 1999 - IOM Report - To Error is Human Building a
Safer - Health System (safety)
- (44-88,00 deaths in hospitals/year from medical
errors) - 2001 - IOM Report Crossing the Quality Chasm A
New - Health System for the 21st Century (quality)
- 2003 - VA National Directive to reduce Risk WSS
(safety) - 2004 - JCAHO Universal Protocol
(safety/quality) - 2004 - SCOAP (safety/quality)
- voluntary hospital-based surgical safety/quality
Washington
10Surgical Safety/Quality/Value Timeline
- 2007 - SCIP (quality)
- mandated national surgical quality standards
- 2007 - WHO Safe Surgery-Saves Lives
(safety/quality) - 2009 - Checklist Manifesto Atul Gwande MD
(safety and quality) - 2010 - Berwick CMS Administrator
(safety/quality/value) - CMS payments - financial penalties for Never
Events - CMS/PQRS payments financial incentives for
quality reporting - 2012 CMS Public Quality Data Reporting Program
(safety/quality/value) - Hospital SSI Rates
- Surgical Re-admission Rates
- Surgical Care Outcome
Assessment Program Washington State Hospital
Association - Surgical Care
Improvement Program US Department of Health and
Human Services - Former President and
CEO, Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)
11Evidence Surgical Safety/Quality/Value Programs
are Effective
- 2006 Central Line Checklists Peter Pronovost
MD - Reduction central line infections - 40 to lt1
- 2008 WHO Safe Surgery - Saves Lives - Atul
Gwande MD - 50 reduction surgical mortality/complications
(multi-nation study) - 2010 Surgical Care Outcomes Assessment Program
(SCOAP) - Universal Protocol (UP) adopted in all Washington
ORs - lt Complications - appendectomy, colectomy,
bariatric surgery - lt Hospital Costs
12Evidence Safety/Quality/Value Programs are
Effective
- 2010 Northern New England Cardiovascular
Disease Study - Group
- improved Cardiovascular surgery outcomes -
participating medical centers - 2011 VA Surgical Safety Program
- reduced surgical errors 25 - 2006-2009
13AAOS Orthopaedic Surgery Safety/Quality Survey
2011
- Survey Goals
- Assess safety/quality in orthopaedics
- Evaluate differences by
- sub-specialty
- length of practice
- practice type
- Evaluate orthopaedic leadership attitudes
regarding safety/quality - Assess orthopaedic safety practices/culture
/errors - Identify opportunities/barriers for change
14Survey Participants
15Participating Practice Types
16Participating Orthopaedic Sub-Specialties
17Participant Surgical Settings
18ResultsPositive Findings
- gt90 use Universal Protocol (UP) in Hospital ORs
- 82 Believe UP Improves Surgical Safety/Quality
- No differences in utilization/understanding UP
by - Years in practice
- Sub-specialty
19Results Negative Findings
- Surgical errors reported ALL orthopaedic settings
- Most undereducated safety science
- lt50 UP use in surgi-centers - rare in
office/procedure rooms - Few surgeon safety leaders/champions
- Younger surgeons lt team communication knowledge
20Model Safe Orthopaedic Surgical Care
21HistoricalOrthopaedic Surgery Culture
22ModelOrthopaedic Surgery Culture of Safety
23DefinitionSafe Orthopaedic Surgical Care
- Safe surgical care is
- surgical care delivered with a highly reliable
surgical system - designed to reduce, with a goal of eliminating,
- preventable harm/s
- continuously monitored through safety data
collection - effectively integrating interfaces between
surgical - patient and family
- physicians, surgeons and staff
- suppliers and equipment
- and environments.
- Modified from Dev Raheja - Safer Hospital
Care
24Definition Quality Orthopaedic Surgical Care
- Quality Surgical Care is
- standardized surgical care based upon
- medical evidence and/or
- consensus-based best surgical practices
- continually improved through innovation
- validated through surgical quality data
collection and analysis - achieving optimal composite surgical outcomes
25Definition Value Orthopaedic Surgical Care
- Value in surgical care
- focused on patient-centered outcomes
- evaluated continually with surgical benchmarking
- supported by only essential resources ()
- effectively coordinated through the entire
surgical care episode - Modified from Michael Porter Redefining
Healthcare
26RelationshipSafety, Quality and Value
27What is needed to improve Orthopaedic Surgical
Safety?
- Change historical orthopaedic surgical behaviors
- Implement surgical safety science and behaviors
into ALL orthopaedic settings - Shift focus from surgeon to team performance
- Establish sustainable culture of surgical
safety - Build and maintain orthopaedic safety/quality
data bases - Validate safety programs in orthopaedic settings
- Collaboration with other safety stakeholder
organizations
28Key Elements Orthopaedic Surgical Safety
- 6 Cs
- (1) Communication effective surgical team
communication - (2) Consent accurate timely informed consent
- (3) Confirmation proper surgical site
marking/identification - (4) Checklists use validated standardized
processes - (5) Concentration focused team without
distraction - (6) Collection systematic safety/quality data
collection - Submitted to CORR 10/2012 Kuo, Robb
29AAOS Surgical Safety Program 2012
- 2011 Fall Board Workshop
- TeamSTEPPS
- 80 Hospital/Surgicenter training sites 2012-2014
- 2012 Spring Board Workshop
- Develop orthopaedic checklists
- Establish/collaborate orthopaedic safety data
bases - Surgical Safety Board Oversight Work Group
2012-2014 - Chair - Dr. Fred Azar
- Orthopaedic Surgery Safety Summit
- Chicago 2012
- Orthopaedic Surgery Sub-Specialty Pilot Programs
- Validate Pilot Safety Programs 2012-2014
30Orthopaedic Safety Summit Goals
- Unify orthopaedics regarding safety
- Reduce errors/ preventable harm/s
- wrong site/side/level/procedure/implant/patient
surgery - surgical complications
- readmissions
- Establish surgical safety as a specialty priority
- Improve orthopaedic outcomes
- Collaborate with other surgical safety
stakeholder organizations
31Participating/Presenting Organizations
- 1. American College of Surgeons (ACS)
- 2. Surgical Care Outcomes Assessment Program
(SCOAP) - 3. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) - 4. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
(CMS) - 5. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
(AHRQ) - 6. The Joint Commission (TJC)
- 7. Ambulatory Surgical Center Association (ASCA)
- 8. Accreditation Association for Ambulatory
Healthcare (AAAH) - 9. Association of Operating Room Nurses (AORN)
- 10. Webster Healthcare Consulting
- 11. Pascal Metrics
32Participating Orthopaedic Organizations
- 1. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
(AAOS) - 2. American Association for Hand Surgery (AAHS)
- 3. American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society
(AOFAS) - 4. American Association of Hip and Knee Surgery
(AAHKS) - 5. American Orthopaedic Society for Sports
Medicine (AOSSM) - 6. American Shoulder and Elbow Society (ASES)
- 7. American Society for Surgery of the Hand
(ASSH) - 8. American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA)
- 9. Arthroscopy Association of North America
(AANA) - 10. Cervical Spine Research Society (CSRS)
- 11. Hip Society (HS)
- 12. Knee Society (KS)
33Participating Orthopaedic Organizations
- 13. Limb Lengthening and Reconstruction Society
(LLRS) - 14. Musculoskeletal Tumor Society (MSTS)
- 15. North American Spine Society (NASS)
- 16. Orthopaedic Trauma Association (OTA)
- 17. Pediatric Orthopaedic Society of North
America (POSNA) - 18. Scoliosis Research Society (SRS)
- 19. Society of Military Orthopaedic Surgeons
(SMOS) - 20. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
(AAOS) - Board of Directors (BOD)
- Board of Specialty Societies (BOS)
- Board of Councilors (BOC)
- Council on Research and Quality (CoRQ)
- Patient Safety Committee (PSC)
34Summit Work Group Safety Projects
- Hand/Foot Ankle Opioid Abuse
- Hip/Knee/Tumor SSI Prevention Bundle
- Pediatrics Peds Patient/ Family Checklist
- Spine Wrong Level Spine Surgery
- Sports UP in Surgicenters
- Trauma Hip Fracture
35Patient Safety Summit
- Next Steps
- Develop Pilot Projects
- Explore data relationships
- ACS, SCOAP
- Explore Global SSI Prevention Program
- CDC, AHRQ, AAOS
- Unified Orthopaedic Safety Information Statement
- Explore BOS Safety role
36Safety Barriers
- Surgeon resistance to change
- Inadequate surgeon knowledge
- Limited utilization of surgical team safety
science - Limited surgeon data contribution and
benchmarking - Inadequate surgeon leadership
37 Orthopaedic Surgical Safety Journey
- Safety is no Accident
- AAOS Sign Your Site Program 1997
38(No Transcript)
39Paradigm Shifts Orthopaedic Safety Programs
Education
- Orthopaedic education programs
- New focus/balance safety, quality and value
science in all - orthopaedic education programs/products
- Orthopaedic Quality Institute
- Safety Summit
- Standardization system-based focus vs.
implant/surgical technique focus
40Paradigm Shifts Orthopaedic Safety Programs
Data
- New safety/quality data programs
- CMS Public Reporting (PACA)
- national benchmarking
- regional benchmarking (by state)
- HVHC - Dartmouth Institute private
benchmarking collaborative - System performance vs. surgeon performance
- System focus prevention harm vs. good results
- Deming count bad light bulbs not good light
bulbs - Patient outcomes vs. surgeon outcomes reporting
- Multi-center vs. single center trials reporting
41Paradigm Shifts Orthopaedic Safety Programs
Clinical
- New standardized system-based interdisciplinary
surgical - care programs
- Geisinger ProvenCare
- Patient contract
- Intermountain Health System
- ACOs
- Bundled Care products
- NorthShore University HealthSystem
- Care reliability (LOS, Costs)
- Complication prevention
- Readmission management
42AAOS Orthopaedic Surgery Safety Summit Chicago,
2012
- 6 Ortho Sub-Specialty Work Groups
- Conference Calls. April - July
- Safety Webinar
- Tuesday, July 31
- Safety Summit
- Sunday, August 5 - Monday, August 6
43Hand Foot/Ankle Work Group
- Opioid misuse/abuse
- Orthopaedic prescribing practices
- Orthopaedic education
- Build consensus standards
- Collaboration national organizations/federal
government/advocacy
44Is there an Orthopaedic Surgery Safety Problem
2012? Orthopaedic Evidence
- Orthopaedic surgical outcomes highly variable -
by surgeon/hospital/healthcare system/region - Limited local, regional, national orthopaedic
safety/quality data - Slow adoption Safety/Quality communication and
process - Few recognized surgeon safety leaders/champions
-
45Hip, Knee, Tumor Work Group
- SSI Prevention bundle
- Pre-op checklist
- Diabetic optimization
- smoking cessation
- OR checklist
- Skin Prep
- Antibiotic optimization
- Post-op checklist
- Wound care optimization
- PIM/OKO modules
- Collaboration AHRQ, AAHKS, HS, KS, MSTS, CMS,
AORN
46Pediatric Work Group
- Patient/Family Checklist
- 10-15 elective procedures
- Focus patient safety, quality, value
- Collaboration POSNA, SRS, Peds Hospitals
- Pilot Study
47Spine Work Group
- Wrong-level Surgery Prevention
- Sign Mark and X-ray
- (SMaX)
- OR Checklist
- Confirmation with imaging
- Pilot Study
- Develop PIM
- Collaboration - NASS
- Educate
48Sports Work Group
- Universal Protocol (UP)- Surgicenters Offices
- Pilot Project
- Scheduling
- Pre-op Holding
- OR
- Patient focus
- Collaboration AOSSM,
- AANA, JC
49Trauma Work Group
- Hip FX Quality Pathway
- Checklists/order-sets
- Pilot Study
- SSI Prevention
- New SSI Quality bundle
- Pilot study
- Hip FX PIM/s
- Collaboration - CDC, AHRQ, OTA, AGS
50AAOSSafe Orthopaedic Surgical Programs
- Surgical Team Communication
- effective patient and surgical team communication
- TeamSTEPPS
- human factors supporting a Culture of Safety
- distraction-free/focused OR environment
- Standardized Surgical Processes
- accurate timely patient-centered informed consent
- proper marking and confirmation of
- site - side - level - implant - procedure -
patient - regular use standardized surgical checklists
- Surgical Data
- Systematic surgical data collection and analysis
51Orthopaedic Safety Summit Ortho Sub-Specialty
Work Groups
- Hand/Foot-Ankle David Ring MD
- Hip/Knee/Tumor Mark Froimson MD
- Pediatrics Kit Song MD
- Spine Paul Huddleston MD
- Sports Laurence Higgins MD
- Trauma Steve Olson MD
52CMS NorthShore THR/TKR All-Cause Readmissions
-
- consensus building among surgeons
- collaboration hospital administration
- surgical team communication
- patient-centered care with optimized outcomes
- reducing/controlling unnecessary costs
- validate innovation improvements
- surgeon self reporting - safety/quality/value
data
53 54 Historical Unsafe Surgical Behaviors
- Process - surgical techniques/care plans - highly
variable - surgeon-unique
- Data -surgical care experience-based
- little/no surgical data collection/analysis
- Communication - surgical authority hierarchal
- surgeon top down to surgical team
-
55Model Needed forSafe Surgical Behaviors
- Process - surgical techniques/care plans
standardized and evidence/consensus-based best
practices - consistent/reliable
- Data - surgical data systemically collected and
analyzed - improvements data/active management driven
- Communication - Surgeon authority shared in team
model - surgeon as leader supporting transparency and
authority - delegation
-
56Model Orthopaedic Surgical Safety
57How?
- Introduce OR behaviors benefitting entire
surgical team - Embrace safety science in orthopaedic practices
- Own orthopaedic surgical safety data and errors
- Shift focus surgeon to surgical care system
improvement - Celebrate improvements
- Partner with patient, stakeholder and safety
organizations
58Safety Summit
- No!
- cultural change resistance
- other industries safety change gt decade
- Options
- embrace change improve care
- resist change accept regulatory
mandates/financial penalties - Safety Summit designed to
- expand safety practices introduced by AAOS in
1997 - build new orthopaedic specific safety tools
- affirm orthopaedic leadership/commitment
59Safety Summit Summary Overview
- Participant Recognition Prioritize Safety for
ALL orthopaedic settings - 6 sub-specialty work groups PILOT new
orthopaedic safety programs - Safety collaboration - CMS, AHRQ, JCAHO, ACS,
SCOAP - Unify Orthopaedic community
- UNIFIED Orthopaedic Safety Information Statement
- BOS and AAOS collaboration new safety programs
/products
60Summit SafetyOutcomes Summary
- Unified Position Statement on Orthopaedic
Surgical Safety - Develop funding support for Work Group pilot
safety programs - Continue communication CMS, JCAHO, AHRQ
- Explore partnering with ACS/SCOAP for surgical
safety data - Explore ongoing support and coordination of the
Orthopaedic Safety programs - ? new BOS Safety Committee
- Collaborate with AAOS Surgical Safety TeamSTEPPS
Communication Program (80 Centers/3 years) -
61Safety Recommendations Trauma Work Group
- Recommend to AAOS - SSI Prevention Guideline
- Develop SSI Prevention Checklist (Bundle)
- Antibiotic management HbA1C/Hypergylcemia
Management - Surgical warming (gt35c.) Albumin/Nutritional
management - Smoking Cessation Blood manageent
- Pilot a Standardized Hip Fracture Patient Care
Pathway - Standardized Order Sets
- Pre-op
- Post-op
- Discharge
- Hip Fracture PIM
- Goals decreased LOS, decreased costs and
improved Fx outcomes -
62Safety Recommendations Sports Work Group
- Develop a Surgical Safety Program for Ambulatory
Surgery Centers - Collaborate with JCAHO, ASCA
- Develop training modules
- Collaborate with AAOS TeamSTEPPS training program
- Currently only 50 of orthopaedic surgicenters
use Universal Protocol
63Safety Recommendations Spine Work Group
- Recommend to AAOS - SSI Infection Prevention
Guideline - Pilot - Wrong Level Spine Surgery Checklist
- Define imaging requirements
- Define wrong level surgery
- Define exception/outlier management obesity,
retained implants
64Safety Recommendations Pediatric Work Group
- Pilot a Family/Patient Focused Peri-operative
Checklist - Pre-op
- Care team review
- Consent,
- Team huddle
- Surgical
- Post-op surgeon review
- Post-op
- Care plan review
- Discharge
- Follow-up appointment
- 10-15 pilot centers identified
- Potential funding sources identified
65Safety Recommendations Hip/Knee/Tumor Work Group
- Recommend to AAOS - SSI Prevention Guideline
- Develop SSI Prevention education products
- OKO
- PIM
- With AHRQ pilot Pre-op Optimization SSI
Prevention - Checklist (Bundle)
- Obesity (BMIgt40 counseling)
- Smoking Cessation (Pre-op counseling/cessation)
- Diabetic Management (Optimize Pre-op HbA1C lt7)
- Anemia Assessment (for pre-op Hblt10)
66Results Wrong Site/Procedure Errors
- 2010-11 - Wrong Site/Procedure Surgeries
- Hospital ORs - 0.4/yr.
- Surgi-Center ORs - 0.25/yr.
- Office Procedure Rooms 0.05/yr.
- Career - Wrong Site/Procedure Surgeries
- Hospital ORs estimated -1/20,000 surgeries
- Surgi-Center ORs estimated -1/80,000 surgeries
- Office Procedure Rooms insufficient data (rare)
67Safety Recommendations Hand/Foot-Ankle Work
Group
- Develop an comprehensive opioid drug misuse/abuse
- management and education program to
- decrease peri-operative opioid drug events,
- improve orthopaedic outcome satisfaction
- reduce opioid dependency/abuse
- 80 of worlds opioid drugs consumed in US
- Opioids - 1 cause of accidental death in young
adults in US