Title: Reliability Theory and its Application to Healthcare
1Reliability Theory and its Application to
Healthcare
2Aims of session
- Introduction to reliability theory the
framework and the three step model - Highly reliable organisations who are they? Can
we learn from them? - Healthcare as a highly reliable industry
designing reliable systems of care - Care bundles a reliability approach
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4Reliability in healthcare
- Healthcare is a high hazard industry
- We are not able to reliably deliver healthcare to
all of our patients all of the time. - Approx. 10 (900,000) of patients admitted to
hospital experience an incident. - 72,000 of these incidents/adverse events
contribute to the death of patients - Many go unrecognised
5Patient safety a global issue
6Impact
- Direct costs
- in England healthcare associated infections are
estimated to cost over 1 billion pounds per year - on average, preventable drug events resulted in
an additional 4.6 days in length of stay - estimated cost of preventable adverse events in
USA is 10.1 billion (Leape et al 1993)
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8Is medicine a high-reliability industry?
- The practice of medicine involves complex systems
in which humans play a key role - Procedures are very technical and sometimes risky
- Medicine should be a high-reliability industry
- Unfortunately literature shows that it is fraught
with error, can be unsafe, and at times is not
effective - The potential for error and system failure is
always there - Things happen on a daily basis staff go off
sick, equipment doesnt work, people forget to do
something - we are all human no matter how
diligent - This is a normal part of a complex healthcare
system
9What is reliability science?
- Reliability principles are used successfully in
industries such as manufacturing and air travel
to help evaluate, calculate and improve the
overall reliability of complex systems - These can be used to design systems that
compensate for the limits of human ability, can
improve safety and the rate at which a system
consistently produces the desired outcomes
10How is it measured?
- Reliability is measured as the inverse of the
systems failure rate - A system that has a defect rate of one in ten or
10 performs at a level of 10 1 - Reliability is defined as failure-free operation
over time - Reliability number of actions that achieve the
intended result, divided by total number of
actions taken
11 A reliability framework
- 10 1 performance on process measures indicates
no articulated common process and an emphasis on
training and reminders (international studies of
adverse events in hospitals shows an error rate
of 10 suggesting a level at which most
organisations currently perform) - 10 2 performance on process measures indicates
processes intentionally designed with tools and
concepts based on the principles of human factors
engineering - 10 3 or better performance on process measures
indicates a well designed system with attention
to processes structure and their relationship to
outcomes
12Examples
- 10-1 80 or 90 success, 1 or 2 failures out of
10 opportunities ( A chaotic process) - B-blockers after acute MI
- 10-2 5 failures or less out of 100
opportunities - Mortality in general surgery
- 10-3 5 failures or less out of 1000
opportunities - - Mortality in routine anaesthesia
- 10-4 5 failures or less out of 10,000
opportunities - A chaotic process is failure in greater than 20
of opportunities - Almost all studies that investigate the
reliability of the application of clinical
evidence conclude that it is 10-1
13Improving reliability
- Level I Intent, vigilance hard work
- Level II Design systems for reliability
- constraints, decision aids,
- reminders, checklists, bundles
- Level III Prevent design for reliability
- Identify make failures visible
- Mitigate prevent / treat harm
due to - failures
14How to reduce variability
- Standardisation
- Care bundles
- ICPs
- Guidelines
- Checklists
- Improve access to information
- Reduce reliance on memory
- Constraints
- Reduce handovers
- Simplify processes
15Standardisation concepts
- Standardisation is done to provide the
appropriate infrastructure - The what we are standardising based on good
medical evidence - The how does not need to be based on good
medical evidence but rather on systems knowledge
16In a broader context
- Aviation passenger safety is measured at 10-6
- Nuclear power plants must demonstrate a design
capable of operating at 10-6 before they can be
built
17IHI three-tiered strategy for designing reliable
care systems
- 1. Prevent failure
- 2. Identify and mitigate failure identify
failure when it occurs and intercede before harm
is caused, or mitigate the harm caused by
failures that are not detected - 3. Redesign the process based on the critical
failures identified
18Designing effective and reliable systems
- Have simple rules complex systems best handled
by this - Feature redundancy offers multiple layers of
defence from error - Incorporate forcing functions a mechanism that
makes it easy to do the right thing and hard to
do the wrong thing (i.e. on a plane the toilet
light cannot be turned on without locking the
door first) - Ensure people cannot work around the system first
understand why people develop workarounds - Minimise reliance on human memory
- Allow the expertise of the people performing the
work to be used standardised protocols provide
a systematic approach - Incorporate technology where possible
- Communicate the advantages of the system to
clinicians if staff do not see this they will
develop workarounds - Consider what happens if the system fails be
prepared
19How Hazardous Is Healthcare?(Leape and Amalberti)
20Highly reliable organisations?
- A definition of a HRO is one that is known to be
complex and risky, yet safe and effective - These organisations acknowledge the complexity of
their systems create an environment in which
individuals can communicate openly about concerns
and design systems that make it difficult for
failures to occur - HROs ask what happens when the system fails?,
not What if the system fails?
21Examples of highly reliable organisations
- Aviation
- Nuclear power plants
- Air traffic control centre
- Nuclear aircraft carriers
22Learning from highly reliable organisations
- Other highly technical industries bear a
similarity to medicine - Airline industry - thousands of flights take
place every day in varying weather conditions. If
a significant error occurred the consequences
would be dire - So why is the error rate in aviation not the
subject of public and media interest?
23Lessons learned the hard way!
24The airline industry
- Aviation industry recognised years ago that human
error is an inevitable part of doing business - The industry chose to address error prevention
and safety by improving communication, flattening
team hierarchy and implementing fail safe systems - These actions have made aviation a highly
reliable industry
25High reliability organisations
- Strong organisational culture of reliability
- Continuous learning
- Effective and varied patterns of communication
- Human resource management practices that support
reliability - Adaptable decision-making dynamics
- Managing technology
- System and human redundancy
26 The need to apply a Systems Approach
- Failure is predictable and can be detected
- Failure arises out of systematic and
organisational factors not just erratic
behaviour of individuals - High reliability departments create safety by
anticipating and planning for unexpected events
and future surprises
27Can reliability be applied to healthcare?
- Although healthcare is not currently highly
reliable, it has the potential to be - IHI and others believe that applying reliability
principles to healthcare has the potential to
reduce defects in care or care processes,
increase the consistency with which appropriate
care is delivered, and improve patient outcomes - To move in that direction we must overcome one of
the largest barriers the culture of medicine
28There is hope
- One bright light in the field of healthcare with
regard to high reliability anaesthetics - No other medical discipline has come as close
- Realisation that the weak link in the process was
the people not the technology (1984 Cooper
published his study review of 329 incidents
involving anaesthesia in a Massachusetts Hospital
identified that nearly 70 of these incidents
related to human error - They have learned lessons and implemented changes
that the rest of the healthcare field are just
beginning to acknowledge - In 1954, one out of every 1,500 patients died as
a result of problems with their anaesthetic - In 2001 that risk has dropped to one in every
250,000
29Using care bundles to improve reliability
- Bundles demand all or none thinking and
measurement - Bundles facilitate identifying failures
- Failures are actively used to redesign the
process - Team work and communication proven to improve
30What are they?
- A series of interventions relating to a treatment
or intervention - - ventilator bundle
- - central Line bundle
- - tracheostomy bundle etc
- When implemented together will achieve
significantly better outcomes than when
implemented individually (IHI 2005)
31Why?
- A way of reducing the gap between research and
practice in clinical areas - Promotes evidence-based change
- The bundle of care will have a greater effect on
the positive outcome of the patient than if used
in isolation - Reduces variation from unit to unit or clinician
to clinician
32Care bundles
- Based on reliability principles all or nothing
compliance - Plane takes off ok, one engine fails during
flight, descends ok, lands ok 75 - Plane takes off ok, one engine fails during
flight, descends badly, crashes on landing 25 - Plane takes off ok, engines ok during flight,
descends ok, lands ok 100 - Overall flight compliance 66
- Would you want to travel on this airline?
33Evidence
- IHI estimates that it could be possible to
achieve an 80 reduction in Surgical Site
Infections (of which 3 could be fatal) and a 50
reduction in deaths from Acute Myocardial
Infarction - They also estimate that an average bed sized U.S.
hospital could save 18 lives from SSI and 108
lives from AMI each year as a result of
implementing care bundles
34An example
- Reduction of Ventilator Acquired Pneumonia
- 46
- 59
- Level of reliability of all 4 elements
of ventilator bundle - lt 95 compliance
- gt 95 compliance
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36Outcomes
- Evidence that the unit is achieving quality care
and doing the right thing for the right patient - Average length of stay is reducing
- Sedation costs reduced financial savings
37Central line bundle
38Central line infection rate
39Making the move
- Need to move towards a culture focused on safety
and reliability - Leadership driven with staff focused on safe and
reliable care - Adoption of standardised methods of communication
and in the creation of an environment in which
people interact collaboratively and feel free to
speak up if they see something worrying - Engineer systems with redundancy and safeguards
that make doing the wrong thing difficult - Create a learning environment in which little
problems are seen as indicators of deeper
potential faults to be addressed proactively