Title: Patient Safety: How You Can Prevent Medical Errors
1Patient Safety How You Can Prevent Medical
Errors
- Arpana R. Vidyarthi, MD
- Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine
- Director of Quality and Safety Programs, GME
2Why Are You Here?
- my time in the developing world led me to
- the scientific exchange that I experienced in
the lab - UCSFs reputation
Help People---Stomp Out Disease
First Do No Harm
3The Institute of Medicine 44,000 98,000
preventable adverse events yearly
Exceeds those who die from highway accidents,
breast cancer, and aids
4Medical CareThen and Now
5First Do No Harm
- Safety of patients is our priority
- .and we could be doing a better job!
6Individual Errors Are Common, And Expected
- Slips
- Errors involving semi-automatic routines daily
activities - exacerbated fatigue, competing tasks
- Mistakes
- Errors in interpretation, misapplication of
cognitive rules - more likely in new or unusual situations
7The Swiss Cheese Model of Major Accidents
Errors
Human Glitch
Flawed Systems
Patient Harm
James Reason, Human Error
8What Type of Human Glitches Cause Harm?
JCAHO Sentinel Event Statistics, 2004
9JCAHO Sentinel Event Statistics, 2004
10JCAHO Sentinel Event Statistics, 2004
11What is Our Goal?
- Freedom from accidental injury due to medical
care, or medical errors
12So What Can You Do About It?
Its Not Rocket Science
- Use Communication Tools
- Be Conscientious of Signouts
- If you see something wrong, tell someone
13Communication Tools
So 1 order moo-shoo, fried riceand what kind of
milk?
- Read back for all verbal orders
- Standardization for order sets
- OR Time-Outs
- SBAR
Can I have an order of moo-shoo pork, fried rice,
and milk?
14Case Presentation Edith presents with SOB
TimeLine
7AM
6AM
5AM
4AM
3AM
2AM
1AM
12AM
8AM
Shortness of Breath Sent for CXR
Labs Admit Settled on ward
Edith in ED ED Resident
Shift Change ED Resident
Night Float Resident
Medicine ward Medicine Resident
15Day 1
TimeLine
2 PM
10AM
6AM
2AM
10PM
6PM
2PM
10AM
6PM
Decompen-sates Edith in ICU Edith in
ICU Edith Stable Edith Stable
Transfer to ICU On Call Medicine Resident
Resident 5 goes to clinic Cross coverage Resident
Resident returns
Resident goes home Day Float Resident
Day Float goes home On call intern
16Day 2
TimeLine
12 PM
8AM
6AM
2AM
10PM
6PM
2PM
10PM
4PM
Edith in ICU Shortness of Breath/
Intubated Intubated Stable Extubated
On Call intern sign out Intern Night Float
Resident Returns
Resident continues
17The first 48 hours of Ediths stay.
Total Residents in Charge of Care 9 Total
Sign-outs 10
- Resident Do you remember us Edith, we are the
doctors taking care of you? - Edith Uh.no?
- Resident 5 to intern She seems altered. Lets
get a stat head CT.
18Why So Many Handoffs Today?
- ACGME duty hour limitations
- 80 hours per week
- 30 hours continuous
- 24 hours off per month
- Practicing physicians
- Group practices cross-coverage
- Hospitalists
4000 Handoffs Daily, 1.5 Million Handoffs per
Year
19Housestaff Experiences
- handoffs are dangerous
- A common suboptimal care practice
- 59 report patient harm
- Increased errors from discontinuity
- Clinical
- Delayed test ordering
- Increased in-hospital complications
- Increased medication errors
- Presumed increase in length of stay
Vidyarthi, JGIM, 2006Kitch, Jt Comm J Qual
Patient Safe,2008 Irani, Surgery, 2005
20Discontinuity and Patient Harm
- Most significant risk for an adverse event
- cross-covering MD
Petersen, L. A. et. al. Ann Intern Med
1994121866-872
21Handoff Best Practices
Best Practice Guidelines
- University Health Consortium
- Position Papers
- IM, ER, Surgery, Hospital Medicine
- Society of Hospital Medicine
- Joint Commission
Standardize
Do itwell
UHC,2006 Solet, Academic Med, 2005 Kemp, Arch
Surg, 2008 Vidyarthi, JHM 2006 Arora, JHM
pending Joint Commission, 2009
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24Communication Channels
www.agilemodeling.com/essays/communication.htm
25Think About What You Would Want To Know
- Who
- What
- Administrative Data
- Problem list
- To Do List
- Nuance
- Where
26What Can You Do To Diminish Harm at Signouts?
- Take it seriouslywe do
- Use standardized toolsthey work
- Verbally sign outit matters
- Role modelremember yesterday
27Individual Errors Are Common, And Expected
- Slips
- Errors involving semi-automatic routines daily
activities - exacerbated fatigue, competing tasks
- Mistakes
- Errors in interpretation, misapplication of
cognitive rules - more likely in new or unusual situations
28So What Do You Do When?
- Report problems
- Incident reports/near miss reports
- Let us know arpana_at_medicine.ucsf.edu,
- Tell your chief residents!
- Dont fear the RCA
29Case Review To Fix the System
- Medical center level
- Multi-disciplinary
- Clinical Events Oversight Committee
- Systematic review of the events including
participants with actions
- Department/division based
- Single discipline
- M and M/Peer Review/Case Review
- Discussion and review by peers
30Engage the Process
- You are the one with the knowledge events
- Clinical
- Operational
- Systems
- You are the one with knowledge solutions
- Experience
- Feasibility
- Culturally applicable
31Safety and Quality Today
- Freedom from accidental injury due to medical
care, or medical errors
- The degree to which health services for
individuals and populations increase the
likelihood of desired health outcomes and are
consistent with current professional knowledge
32And on the Quality Front
McGlynn, E. A. et al. N Engl J Med 2003
33UCSF Programs to Improve Quality
- Curriculum in your department
- Opportunities for Q/S projects
- Resident engagement on committees
- Patient Care Fund
- Resident Quality and Safety Committee
34UCSFMC/GME Incentive Program
35Program Specific Incentives
- Anesthesia
- Increase rate of prophylactic antibiotics
- Dermatology
- Decrease clinic wait times
- EM
- Increase PCP communication
- Peds
- Asthma action plans
- Neuro
- Improve swallow exams on stroke pts
- Medicine
- Increase PCP communication
- Neurosurgery
- Ontime start in the OR
- ObGyn
- Improve DM orders
- Radiology
- Critical results reported
400 each/Total 1200
36Safety and Quality are About Systems
Think of your doctors and nurses as actors in a
grand play. Sure, the play is different when
King Lear is played by Sir Laurence Olivier or
Robin Williams. But Lear dies in both stagings.
Internal Bleeding, Wachter and Shojania
37Safety and Quality are About Systems
Think of your doctors and nurses as actors in a
grand play. Sure, the play is different when
King Lear is played by Sir Laurence Olivier or
Robin Williams. But Lear dies in both stagings.
If we want the patient to live, we must change
the script!
Internal Bleeding, Wachter and Shojania
38You Can Change The Script
- Prioritize safety in your everyday work
- Use communication tools
- Signout patients with care
- Report problems you see
- Ask for help!
- Think about the quality of care provided
- Engage the systems
First Do No Harm
Help People---Stomp Out Disease
39THANKS