Title: Project Report - Lean Sigma
1On the CUSP Stop BSI
Lessons from CUSP/CLABSI Getting to Zero and
Sustaining your Improvements
Jill Marsteller, PhD, MPP Armstrong Institute
for Patient Safety and Quality Elizabeth
Martinez, MD Massachusetts General Hospital
2Learning Objectives
- To revisit key aspects involved in reducing
infections - To think ahead about ways to make your investment
of time and improvements in BSI rates last
forever (embed) - To consider how to apply CUSP to other relevant
topics (expand) and maintain its positive effects
in your area (embed) - To make sure all patients in your institution
have access to the safest care (expand)
3What it takes
- 12 Best Practices to Eliminate BSIs
4Best Practices
- Commit to zero
- Teams where the senior executive committed to
zero do better! - ICU is accountable for the problem
- Senior leader holds the ICU-level leaders
accountable - Senior leader expects the unit leaders to present
their data to the senior leaders, board of
trustees - Senior leader expects the unit to investigate
every CLABSI
5Best Practices
- Infection preventionists work with the unit
- Train, monitor and help investigate infections
- IPs should be a part of the team!
- Unit physicians and nurse leaders own the
problem. - Avoid the femoral site
- Key is avoidance of the site associated with
highest infection rate Focus on this!
6Best Practices
- Make doing the right thing easy!
- Have ALL of the necessary items for line
placement easily available - Line cart or Line kit with all of the items
together - Everybody knows where they are
- Make sure they are ALWAYS available
- Have a system in place to ensure this
- Standardize the line placement process across the
ICU and the hospital.
7Best Practices
- Empower all provides to STOP the process if a
problem is noted during line placement - Make certain that the front-line providers feel
supported and they know who they can call. - Investigate all CLABSIs as defects
- Avoidable errors
- Examine all steps of the process
- Was the checklist used?
- Where was it placed?
- Do they think it is associated with placement or
maintenance? - What is the plan for prevention of the next
infection?
8Best Practices
- Review and audit catheter maintenance
- Review the policies and practices
- Physically audit the process
- Are dressings in place?
- Observe the process of a dressing change.
- What are local processes for tubing changes?
- What is being done when lines are accessed?
9Best Practices
- Train all new team members
- Have system to train new nursing staff
- Have system to train new resident/mid level staff
- Include in the training
- The expectations for placement and the ICUs goal
of zero line infections - That all staff are empowered to stop the process
10Best Practices
- Share data
- Post data in the ICU so that everybody sees and
understands it - Post both quarterly rates AND weeks without any
infections - Report data with senior leaders
- EVERYBODY in the unit should know their CLABSI
rates and weeks without an infection!
11Two More Es
12Implementation Framework
Frontline Staff Team Leaders Senior Executives
Engage Ask, how does this make the world a better place?
Educate What do I need to do? Convert evidence into behaviors evaluate awareness and agreement
Execute How can I do it? Listen to resisters Standardize, create independent checks, and learn from mistakes
Evaluate How do I know we made a difference?
13Implementation Framework
Frontline Staff Team Leaders Senior Executives
Embed Has this become business as usual? How do I know it will last? Make policies and procedures, train new people, walk the process
Expand Who else needs to know this? Whats next? Pass it on to other units Identify and address your next challenges
14EmbedPlan for Sustainability
- Why worry about the distant future?
- What you can anticipate
- Turnover of staff/new staff
- Changes in policy (system, hospital, national)
- New projects/distractions
- Complacency
- Emergencies and complex cases (someone will call
for exceptions to be made)
15EmbedPlan for Sustainability
- Things you can do now to support long term
viability of the CLABSI reduction - Write it into policy
- Include in training for all new members
- Audit or monitor to be sure it is routine
practice - Set up reliable supply chain (borrowing protocol
alert system assign someone)
16Implementation vs. Sustainability
Where will you be?
High Implementers Low Implementers
High Sustainers
Low Sustainers
Marsteller, Pronovost, Shortell. Improving
Quality of Care Good Implementation is not
Enough. 8/11. Submitted to a peer reviewed
journal do not copy, re-use or cite without
permission.
17EmbedPlan for Sustainability
- Set up a Learning Network of peers
- Build infrastructure for sharing lessons locally
and system-wide - Plan your line of succession
- Promote, examine and work on culture of safety
184 yr CLABSI Results from ICUs in Michigan
Time period Median CLABSI rate
19-21 months 0
22-24 months 0
25-27 months 0
28-30 months 0
31-33 months 0
34-36 months 0
Pronovost et al. BMJ 2010
19EmbedPlan for Sustainability
- Practices that aided sustainability in the
Michigan Project - Continued feedback of infection data that the
team perceived as valid - Improvements in safety culture that occurred as
part of the overall Keystone ICU project - An unremitting belief in the preventability of
bloodstream infections - Involvement of senior leaders who reviewed
infection data and provided teams with the
resources needed - A shared goal rather than a competition to reduce
infection rates throughout the state
20EmbedPlan for Sustainability
- Things you can do now to support long term
viability of your CUSP program - Maintain your CUSP team
- Consider rotating membership
- 40 Teams at JHH-- some going 10 years
- Collect the Staff Safety Assessment on ongoing
basis - Keep Learning from Defects
- Keep your executive (the project is not over)
- Develop hospital-wide CUSP team or meeting
21EmbedPlan for Sustainability continued
- Does everyone on your unit feel part of the CUSP
team? - If not, re-evaluate your CUSP team
- Are all staff encouraged to attend?
- Is your executive partner, physician, and
infection preventionist present and engaged at
every meeting? - Are there others that need to join? (ex.,
respiratory therapy)
22EmbedPlan for Sustainability
- Is there a sense of ownership of the CUSP team on
your unit? - Incentives (evaluation, promotion) for
second-order problem solving / learning from
defects - Everyone is a problem solver
- Repeat culture of safety surveys, may show CUSP
success - Use CUSP tools (Culture Checkup) to keep working
on safety culture
23Expand--Spread CLABSI Interventions
- Why think about expanding to other units?
- To make sure all patients in your institution
have access to the safest care - Solidifies own knowledge of CLABSI prevention,
investigation - Unique challenges of other units may offer new
ideas and methods/may change your perceptions of
your own implementation
24Expand CUSP to Identify New Defects
- Why think about your next defect?
- Quality can always improve
- Use new capacity to change to make care better
- Maintain engagement of staff/interest and
attention of management - Allows some control over what the next initiative
will be - More rewarding environment
25Expand CUSP to Other Units
- Why do we spread CUSP to other units?
- To make sure all patients in your institution
have access to the safest care - Improve culture throughout the institution
- To create a standard language and understanding
of the science of safety - To become a high reliability organization
26Expand CUSP to Other Units
- How do we spread CUSP to other units?
- Requires leadership endorsement and support
- Resources allocated will determine extent and
speed of spread - Human resources, protected time on unit-based
teams for champions, training needs - Consider organizational infrastructure to expand
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28Reference List
- Buchanan D, Fitzgerald L, Ketley D, Gollop R,
Jones JL, Saint Lamont S, Neath A and Whitby E.
No going back A review of the literature on
sustaining organizational change. International
Journal of Management Reviews 2005 7(3)189-205. - Evashwick C, Ory M. Organizational
characteristics of successful innovative health
care programs sustained over time. Fam Community
Health. 2003 Jul-Sep26(3)177-93. - Greenhalgh T, Robert G, Macfarlane F, Bate P and
Kyriakidou O. Diffusion of innovations in service
organizations systematic review and
recommendations. Milbank Q 200482(4)581-629. - Pronovost, PJ et al. Sustaining Reductions in
Catheter-Related Bloodstream Infections in
Michigan Intensive Care Units British Medical
Journal, February 4, 2010 340c309.