Title: Parent Concern Safety Bundle RCNIC
1Parent Concern Safety BundleRCNIC
- M. Victoria deCastro, BSN, RNC, Clinical Manager
- Debbie Hershberger, MSN, RN, Outcomes Manager
- Jason Olivea, Quality Improvement Consultant
2Parent Concern Safety Bundle Project
- The purpose of this project is to develop and
facilitate the RCNIC Improvement Team in
developing and cultivating a safety repertoire or
bundle that engages families directly in error
prevention.
3History-Why do we need a safety bundle to address
parent concerns?
- A mother questioned the nurse about the amount of
weighed medication that was going to administered
to her baby. - The nurse reviewed the label and compared the
dosage with the MAR. The dosage on the label and
the dosage on the MAR matched.
4History-Why do we need a safety bundle to address
parent concerns
- The nurse verified with mom that both documented
dosages matched, concluding that the packaged
amount was correct. - The medication was given per NG to the infant
with feeding. - Shortly after this feeding, the infant vomited
and arrested due to presumed aspiration.
5History-Why do we need a safety bundle to address
parent concerns
- The mother again questioned the amount of
medication that was administered, knowing that
side effects of the medication were nausea and
vomiting. - Leftover baggies of the medication were taken to
pharmacy and reweighed. - It was discovered that the amount was over 10
times the ordered dosage. - This event was later deemed a serious safety
event.
6Questions?
- What could have been done differently in this
case to prevent the serious safety event?
7Beyond the RCNIC
- The engagement of patients and families in the
culture of patient safety and error prevention is
both a CCHMC-wide initiative and a National
Patient Safety Goal. - The safety bundle in the RCNIC will become the
foundation for the CCHMC-wide initiative.
82007 National Patient Safety GoalsThe Joint
Commission
- Goal 13 Encourage patients active involvement
in their own care as a patient safety strategy. - What do we need to do according JCAHO?
- Define and communicate the means for patients and
their families to report concerns about safety
and encourage them to do so. - What is the rationale?
- Communication with patients and families about
all aspects of their care, treatment or services
is an important characteristic of a culture of
safety. When patients know what to expect, they
are more aware of possible errors and choices.
Patients can be an important source of
information about potential adverse events and
hazardous conditions.
9The Aim Statement
- The Aim of the Safety Bundle To design high
reliability processes in the RCNIC to ensure that
care is put on hold until parental safety
concerns are resolved (i.e. Stop the Line - Developed from the key drivers or root causes of
the original problem
10The Key Drivers
- See the Staff Resource Folder on E-Chirp for the
Key Driver Diagram
11The Primary Goal
- To actively and consistently (100 of the time,
with 100 of parents/families, and with 100 of
staff) engage families in a formalized process
that partners families with the healthcare team
to ensure patient safety and to identify and
address safety concerns directly at the point of
care.
12How was the bundle developed?
- A high reliability process quality improvement
methodology was used. - This process focused on system solutions and a
problem-solving approach (define, measure,
analyze, improve, and control). - Outcomes and improvement are systematically
analyzed. - High reliability strategies were developed as
components of the bundle.
13How was the bundle developed?
- A RCNIC Improvement Team was brought together to
develop standards for parental/family engagement. - The current state of parental/family engagement
was analyzed. Emphasis was placed on
understanding where failures in communication may
occur. - Strategies were developed to combat these
potential failures.
14What were some of the potential failures and
strategies to combat these failures?
- Parents do not express their concerns-Why?
- a. Lack of knowledge
- Not sure, especially at first, what to ask, how
to ask questions, or who to direct their
questions to - There is a feeling of being overwhelmed by their
babys illness or just by being a new parent - b. Too Afraid
- Non-assertive-may need an invitation to ask
questions or question care - Worried about retaliation/punishment for asking
questions or questioning care, concern about
being viewed as pushy and asking too many
questions - Developmental issues-for example, teen parents
versus adult parents - Uncertainty about their expectations regarding
safety vs. non-safety concerns-parents may not
know what to do when they have a concern, lack of
knowledge that they are allowed to stop care or
change care
15What were some of the potential failures and
strategies to combat these failures?
- Reliable strategies were designed to combat the
knowledge gap, fear, developmental gaps, and
personality differences - Standardizing expectations of parents/families
and staff as partners - To be discussed in detail 24-72 hours after
admission, with documentation of this discussion
in Education When - Develop a standard process for addressing and
resolving parent safety concerns and other
clinical concerns - Posting expectations process at each
bedside-the orange dry erase boards with the
bedside cards of expectations, Stop the Line,
use of independent verification with the
PCFs-See Staff Resource Folder for more on
Independent Verification - Hardwiring inviting questions-i.e. Do you have
any concerns about feedings, medications, pain
management, or any other safety concerns?, with
documentation in the flowsheet and narrative - Each of these strategies were tested, revised
based on staff and parent feedback, and retested.
Refinement of the process continues.
16The Process Map
- Click onto the Staff Resource Folder found in
Blitz for the map of the entire process for the
safety bundle - This folder will be available on E-Chirp
17The Main Parts of the Bundle
- Hardwiring parental engagement into routine
practice- This is achieved by posting and
routinely asking and documenting the following
"Safety Questions when parents arrive and
depart from the unit and when parents call for
updates- - Do you have any safety concerns regarding your
baby's medications, feedings, pain management, or
any other safety concerns? These questions are
also posted on the orange dry erase boards - Documentation of routine parent safety questions
on the flowsheet (Safety Questions Asked or
SQA) - Documentation of parent safety concerns in the
narrative to include concern, intervention, and
resolution-The bedside prompts detailing the
process will be posted at each bedside
18The Orange Dry Erase Board
- Posting the parental expectations and questions
on a dedicated board at each bedside creates a
reliable standard of practice - The board is not meant to written on by
parents-the marker is available during this test
phase - The marker is to be used to rewrite the questions
in case it smears off - Once we have determined the final wording, a more
permanent version will be placed on the boards.
19The Bundle at Admission Days 1-3
- Day 1-Verbally invite and encourage parents to
bring up safety concerns to direct care team, by
asking them if they have any concerns as listed
on the orange bedside boards. You can refer them
to the bedside cards if you think they are ready.
The following should be done daily- - Questions should be asked when a parent calls,
when a parent comes in, and when a parent leaves
for the day - Routine safety questions about feeding,
medications, pain management and general care
concerns. New questions or concerns may be added
in the future. - Day 2 or Day 3-Review bedside cards on the RCNIC
Process for Staff to Resolve Parental Safety
Concerns, Clinical Concerns, Parent Staff
Expectations, and the SBAR Card. Document this
review with the parents in Education When. - On the flowsheet and narrative, document any
concerns and responses from the parents,
including how a safety concern is resolved, if
applicable.
20The Main Parts of the Bundle
- Using highly reliable error prevention
techniques to address parental safety concerns - If a safety concern arises, related care
processes are stopped. The staff person will
assess the situation using SBAR. Then the staff
person will call the PCF (charge nurse) to the
bedside for independent verification (using SBAR)
of the situation. Both persons will then
determine who the expert (attending physician,
pharmacist, for example) is and bring them to the
bedside to resolve the parent concern prior to
resuming related care.
21Levels I II Concerns
- Because of staff feedback during testing of the
bundle, categories of concerns and separate
processes were defined - Level I is a clinical concern or plan of care
concern - Level II is a safety concern or a clinical
concern with actual or potential safety
implications - See Staff Resource Folder (Process Map) for Level
I II Concerns - Coming soon-guidelines defining levels of
parental concerns to be available in the Staff
Resource Folder
22Common Concerns and Other Considerations
- It is okay to individualize your approach to
parents when asking the safety questions-if you
think that the word safety is uncomfortable or
worrisome for a specific family, then customize
what you say to the parent and just ask them if
they have any questions about feedings, etc. - Also, depending on the babys status, you can
include ventilator or oxygen questions or exclude
feeding questions as applicable.
23Common Concerns and Other Considerations
- Why were feedings, pain management, and
medications chosen as the focus of the safety
questions? - These were the top 3 incidents reported in the
safety report system that involved parent
concerns. The bundle may be revised to consider
other safety reported incidents such as IV
infiltrates, the top reported safety incident in
the RCNIC.
24Common Concerns and Other Considerations
- How do I know if it is a safety concern?
- If a parent says he or she has a safety concern,
then it is a safety concern. - If an error related to the concern may or will
jeopardize patient safety, you should treat the
concern as a safety concern. - If you are not sure if the concern is a safety
concern, use SBAR to clarify the concern. If you
are still uncertain, it is best and safest
practice to treat the concern as a safety concern.
25Common Concerns and Other Considerations
- What do I do if the parents concern is a
clinical concern or plan of care concern? - Ask parents some clarifying questions using SBAR
- Address and resolve the concern appropriately
- On the flowsheet and narrative, document the
concern, how you addressed the concern, and what
was done to resolve the concern -
26Common Staff Concerns and Other Considerations
- The parents I work with do not have a problem
expressing their concerns. Do I still need to
ask the questions? - Use your own critical judgment and common sense
- If your parents have already verbalized their
questions and concerns and you feel that their
questions adequately address their concerns, you
do not have the re-ask the questions. Remember
to document the parent-directed questions as
safety questions asked
27Lessons Learned Next Steps-The Data Collection
Phase
- Ways to improve the process will be continually
looked at based on outcomes and feedback. - Parents will be surveyed on the parent
satisfaction survey about how well they perceive
the RCNIC staff addresses their safety concerns. - The percentage of concerns that are safety
concerns will assessed (team rep meeting with the
PCFs and team rep checklist). - Data will be collected measuring how well the
bundle is being followed.
28Lessons Learned Next Steps-Implementation and
Sustainability
- Permanent changes to the flowsheet will be done
with the next revision. - Work systems (such as addition of Stop the
Line, documentation), standards, procedures and
policies are being added and revised as needed. - Official roll-out of the bundle unit-wide will
occur in September 2007 -
29Lessons Learned A Parents Perspective
- Several parents, who have stated that they do not
have problems speaking up about their concerns,
have stated the bundle is a good way to help
quieter, less assertive parents to feel
comfortable discussing their concerns. - These parents have also stated that having a
formal invitation and explanation to talk about
their concerns would have eased their initial
discomfort and uncertainty in verbalizing their
concerns.
30Lessons Learned A Parents Perspective
- Recently, a parent verbalized that she has
noticed a positive change in how well staff are
actively asking about her concerns - She stated that she appreciates being invited to
discuss her concerns, because she feels like
staff want to hear about her concerns, and she,
then, does not feel like the pushy parent,
especially with staff she does not know well.
31The Safety Bundle in Summary
- On day 1 (of admission)-Ask the safety questions
and document on the flowsheet/narrative - Day 2 or Day 3-Review the entire process with
parents - Document this explanation in Education When
- Use SBAR to clarify concerns, especially safety
concerns - Use independent verification for safety concerns
- Involve the appropriate expert(s) to resolve the
concern, such as the attending physician if it is
a medical safety concern - Document on the flowsheet and narrative
32Final Words
- This bundle is based on the best practices of
- parent engagement that already exists in
- the RCNIC, making those practices standard
- Unit-wide and hospital-wide.
- Thank you to everyone for all your input and
- hard work!!