Title: Patient Safety and Information Technology IT:
1Patient Safety and Information Technology (IT)
VeHU 2008 Session 177 Tuesday July 15, 2008 330
PM 500 PM
2HOUSE KEEPING
3 HOUSE KEEPING
- This is 1.5 Hour lecture session
- Restrooms are located
- Cell Phones
- Please turn off or change to vibrate
- If you must answer a call, please leave the room.
4 HOUSE KEEPING
- Please,
- No questions during the presentation.
- Questions written on the 3X5 card will be
answered at the conclusion of the presentation. - For questions not answered,
- the question and the answer will be available on
the web.
5 Faculty
- Office of Information (OI)
- Health Data and Informatics (HDI)
- Patient Safety Office (PSO)
- Toni King, RN, BSN
- Management Analyst
- Joe Lucas
- Management Analyst
- Janine Purcell, M.S.I.E.O.R.
- Cognitive Engineer
-
6 Learning Objectives
- Describe the Health Data and Informatics (HDI)
Patient Safety Office (PSO) vision, mission, and
processes. - List patient safety issues in terms of human
performance. - Explain examples of patient safety initiatives.
- Identify the impact of data integrity and
information management on patient safety.
7Keeping Patients Safe Using IT Do No Harm
8Vision
Veterans Health Administration (VHA) Office of
Information (OI) is committed to providing the
safest, most effective, and highest quality
software systems that support the delivery of
healthcare.
9 Mission
- Patient safety is a continuous process that
needs to be an integral component within
healthcare delivery systems. Information
technology has been recognized as a key factor in
enabling healthcare facilities to have the
ability to provide accurate and usable
information to assist clinicians, nurses,
pharmacists, allied health care professionals and
other personnel that interact with and provide
quality care to patients.
10 Mission (cont.)
-
- The OI patient safety program will support the
development and implementation of software
application systems that focus towards
improvement in safe, effective, quality health
care, such that the following goals have been
established
11 Goals
- Define program objectives supported by personnel
and budget. - Incorporate safety principles, using best
practices such as user centered design based upon
human factors engineering principles and
standardized processes as well as incorporating
usability testing into the development and
pre-release evaluation process. - Implement a non-punitive system for reporting
safety incidents as well as safety concerns with
an ultimate emphasis on analysis in which to
focus future development. - Establish training and teaching programs for
existing and new staff to establish an
organizational culture of safety.
12History
- National Center for Patient Safety (NCPS)
- NCPS was established in 1999 to develop and
nurture a culture of safety throughout the
Veterans Health Administration. Their goal is the
nationwide reduction and prevention of harm to
patients as a result of their care - OI Health Data Informatics Patient Safety
- In 2002 Office of Information (OI) recognized
that Information Technology can have an effect on
patient safety. They established a process to
ensure that the electronic health record enhances
patient care. - In 2005 -Hired full time Director, OI HDI Patient
Safety who is a liaison between NCPS and OI - In 2007/ 2008 - Started staffing the OI HDI
Patient Safety to provide needed expertise and
support
13 Role of OI HDI Patient Safety
- Foster a non-punitive system for reporting safety
incidents as well as safety concerns with an
ultimate emphasis on analysis in which to focus
future development - Evaluate risk, determine recommended actions
- Communicate necessary notification(s) to
Veterans Administration Medical Centers
We dont fix the problem, we are A stimulus to
initiate discussion and a facilitator in having a
solution created.
14Human Factors Engineering What it is and How its
helpful
15Learning Objectives
- Brief introduction to human factors principles
- Human performance issues relevant to clinical
settings
16Human Factors Engineering
User-Centered Design
Designing Systems to fit human capabilities and
limitations AND the tasks that humans perform
in or with that system
17Evolution of Human Factors
- George Washington time and motion study of
his farm operations - Frederick Taylor Time and motion studies in
Industrial Age - Frank Gilbreth Motion study in surgery
- World War II -- Aviation HF
- The Age of Computers
- Human Computer Interaction (HCI)
Time and motion studies record a chronology
of actions and time to complete those actions.
They are used as a tool for process improvement.
18Why User Centered Design?
- Safety principles early detection of potential
problems before an adverse event occurs. - Cost benefits
- allows for changes in User Interface early in
life cycle, before time and resources have been
expended. - increases the chance that the product will better
meet end users needs. - Product effectiveness an intuitive user
interface design will lead to more accurate and
efficient product use.
19Industry and Legislative Drivers for Human Factors
- AAMI HE74 Human Factors Design Process for
Medical Devices - AAMI HE75 Design Principles for Medical
Devices - ISO 9241
- Hardware and Software Ergonomic Standard
- ISO 13407
- Human Factors Enhancements to Software
Development - Rehabilitation Act Amendments of 1998 (Section
508)
20Human Systems Model
21Culture
22Environment
23Tools for BCMA
Eyes and Ears Memory Cognition Body
BCMA Software Medication Carts Bar Code
Scanners PYXIS Pill crushers
24Tasks
- Nurse on med pass regenerates missed meds report
several times during the med pass on the computer
and checks it onscreen - By doing this she updates her checklist of
remaining patients (Situational Awareness)
Acute Psych 23 patients for that med pass
25A Human Factors Framework
- What do people do?
- Sense
- Perceive/assume/interpret/think
- Store information in memory
- Retrieve information from memory
- Decide how to respond
- Respond
26(No Transcript)
27- MZALB
- ZYP
- JCEFT
- SUWRG
- TPJOM
- XCIDB
- GCUFI
- WOPR
- BGLDA
LAALK OEWSI GCUFI TPJOM JCEFT SUWRG TPJOM XCIDB J
DIEL
28BLUE RED GREEN WHITE BLUE RED YELLOW WHITE YELLOW
RED BLUE WHITE GREEN BLUE RED WHITE YELLOW GREEN
29Automatic Processing Versus Controlled Processing
(Preece, 1994)
- Automatic processes unaffected by memory limits
- fast
- demand minimal attention
- not available to consciousness
- Controlled processes require attention and
conscious control
30A Human Factors Framework
- What do people do?
- Sense
- Perceive/assume/interpret/think
- Store information in memory
- Retrieve information from memory
- Decide how to respond
- Respond
31Mind as Tool Multi-store Model of Memory
(Preece, 1994)
- Sensory store
- Specific to sense
- vision less than a second
- hearing several seconds
- Working memory
- information actively being worked on
- Millers Magic Number 7 /- 2
- Permanent long term memory
32Designing to improve decision making
- Cognitive aids
- Optimal screen design
- Density
- Layout
- Smart displays
- Consolidating the data needed to make a clinical
decision - Checklists, electronic or paper-based
33Speed / Accuracy Tradeoff
- Cognitive speed bumps
- Removal of data field autofill
- Confirmatory or mandatory fields
34Human Memory Model Working Memory (Mayhew, 1992)
- Working memory is where people
- perform calculations
- interpret incoming data
- juggle information as they solve problems
- Sustained attention is required to maintain
contents of working memory - Interruptions hasten the degradation of
information in working memory, especially as
interruptions become more complex
35Limited resources are a cognitive reality
36Solutions must come from the nursing team
- Vest for Med Pass
- DRUG ROUND IN PROGRESS
- PLEASE DO NOT INTERRUPT AS MISTAKES CAN COST
LIVES
37A Human Factors Framework
- What do people do?
- Sense
- Perceive / assume / interpret / think
- Store information in memory
- Retrieve information from memory
- Decide how to respond
- Respond
- Interact in a social environment
- Learn (teach and communicate)
38How to respond
- When I say up, everyone raise your hand up as
quickly as you can - Then put it right back down as quickly as you can
39Medical Software Example
40Automatic Processing Versus Controlled Processing
(Preece, 1994)
- Automatic processes unaffected by memory limits
- fast
- demand minimal attention
- not available to consciousness
- Controlled processes require attention and
conscious control - Automatic processes difficult to unlearn once
they have become automatic themselves - function key assignments, consistent screen
locations
41Volunteer to write instructions
- Starting from
- Jar of Peanut Butter
- Bag of Bread
- Plate and butter knife
- Ending with two slices of bread and peanut butter
on plate
42Self Disclosure How it Helps
43 When Things Go Wrong
-
- In the report To Err is Human Building a
Safer Health System, the Institute of Medicine
estimated that as many as 98,000 hospitalized
Americans die each yearnot as a result of their
illness or disease but as a result of errors in
their care (IOM, 2000)
44 When Things Go Wrong (cont.)
- Data inventory is key.listening to the
people in your administration, talking to your
administration, talking to focus groups of
patients and talking to clinicians. The most
extraordinary question we ever asked our staff
was, What do you lie awake at night worrying
about? The list they came up with is massive,
full of the things that could fail or go wrong. -
- James Conway, MS, COO
- Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
- In Reducing Medical Errors, Improving Patient
Safety Taking the Next Step, Health Leaders
Roundtable, June 2001.
45Why Report IT Safety issues
- Good for patients and staff
- Learning opportunity
- Improves safety through feedback
- Build organizational memory on what happened and
why - Communicate organization concerns about IT issues
- Aids in correcting vulnerabilities
46Role of the OI HDI Patient Safety
- Direct and Indirect Partnerships
- Patients
- Business owners
- NCPS
- Medical Centers
- End Users
- Analysts
- Support staff
- IT specialists
47 OI HDI Patient Safety
- Provides a critical look at all issues
- Data analysis
- Interviews - (storytelling)
- Research
- Remedy tickets
- Past Electronic Error and Enhancement Report
(E3R) - Clear Quest database
- NCPS (SPOT) database
- Review literature
- Regulatory organizations
- RCA, HFMEA, Focus Groups
- Participate with various workgroups
48 Focus on IT Patient Safety
- Reportreportreport
- Engaging senior leadership
- Involve front end users
- Use available Information Technology tools
49What VA Staff Can Do to Promote a Culture of IT
Patient Safety
50Promoting IT Patient Safety
- Engage patients
- Understand how the environment of care can impact
patient safety - Look for anomalies and potential problems
- Report IT near misses/close calls
- Improve Communication
- Automate tasks that are likely to cause errors
- Reduce interruptions
- Intervene when problems are detected
- Culture of vigilance
51- Key Learning from the Dana-Farber Cancer
Institutes 10-Year Patient Safety Journey
Al-American Society of Clinical Oncology 2006
Education Book P.617 James Conway et al.
52Sustaining a Culture of IT Patient Safety
- Everyone in your organization needs to know they
play an important role in patient safety. - Leadership Support
- Non-punitive Error Reporting
53Solutions Must Include the End User Perspective
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55Learning Objectives
- Solutions must include end user perspectives
56Evaluating a Procedure
57Usability evaluation
- Learned intuition and assumptions
- Stereotypes
- Metaphors
- Iterative evaluation with the human processor
is how to debug
58 59What ignites usability?
- Usefulness
- Efficiency
- Ease of learning
- Ease of remembering
- User satisfaction
60How do we increase the usability of our world?
61High level tactics
- Involve end users as early as possible in the
design of new systems, processes, and tools - Integrate human factors knowledge into product
and process design
62Usability Evaluation
- Gathering data about the usability of a design
or product by a specified group of users for a
particular activity within a specified
environment or work context. - Preece, 1995
- Somebody doing something, somewhere
-
63Human Factors Engineering initiatives in VHA
Information Technology
- CPRS Lab status information display Informed
Consent software - CCOW
- BCMA software development and evaluation
- Bar code expansion
- Medication carts
- Human factors education
64Examples of User Evaluations
- Distributed user evaluations (green lights
assessment) - Remote user evaluations with telephonic
interviewing - Scenario-based usability testing
- Face-to-Face
- Onsite observation and interviewing
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66(No Transcript)
67Code Blue Software Prototype
- User workgroup
- Screen design principles
- Terminology
- Icons versus labels
- Usability Evaluation
- Mock code blue
- Real staff
- Script
68Computerized Medication Carts
69Medication cart evaluation
- Published internal Recommendations advocating
assessment of computerized medication cart
equipment in the actual work setting using actual
work tasks - Steerability is a prime concern and requires
cart be loaded and steered through actual
physical environment in actual workflow to
adequately assess it - Ergonomic issues such as height adjustability for
range of staff - Utility of cart features such as work surface,
storage capacity, custom accessories - Challenges arise from government procurement
cycle and contracting rules
70To recap
- Solutions must include the end user perspective
71Examples of Patient Safety IT Initiatives
72- Improving safety and quality is a team sport.
The "dream team" consists of the best clinicians,
the best people in IT, and the best systems that
integrate them. It won't be easy, but that's the
ultimate goal of the system we want to create for
ourselves. - Dr.
Carolyn Clancy, M.D., Director, AHRQ
73 PSI-07-227
- Issue- Remedy Help Desk220858 11/27/07 The
wrong drug was filled and dispensed by Parata
robot for 3 Rxs when VistA HL7 RXD segment sent
incorrect NDC numbers for the Rxs - Flagged as PSI on 11/29/2007
- PSO analysis starts 11/29/07
- PSI discussed on the PSWG 12/13/07
74 PSI-07-227 (cont.)
- PSI Scored by PSWG
- Severity 1Minor
- 4Catastrophic
- Frequency 3Occasional
- Detectability4remote
- __________________
- Total Score 48
75 PSI-07-227 (cont.)
- Scoring guidelines for follow up Actions
- Greater than 24 Solution to address the
reported risk must be included in first available
software release. (i.e. a patch must be
created immediately or a current patch under
development must be adjusted to include the
solution) - If unable to provide a software solution in
current version, a detailed plan of action must
be provided. (i.e. inclusion in current
version would be prohibited due to current
product architecture, however, a software
solution can be adapted into future software
architecture) - http//vaww.vhaco.va.gov/HDI/oipatientsafety.asp
76 PSI-07-227 (cont.)
- Development finds the source of the problem
- Series of meetings to discuss the problem and the
solution (fix). - Emergency patch (disable VistA speed renewal
function) released 4/1/08 - Permanent solution scheduled for release 6/1/08
77Example Two of Patient Safety IT Initiatives
As soon as you see a mistake and don't
fix it, it becomes your mistake.
78Free-text Allergy Issue
- Free-text allergy entries in CPRS do not
generate automatic drug-allergy order checks
necessary for effective medication management.
Patients with a known allergy may be administered
a medication or served a food product for which
they could have a severe reaction.
79Free-text Allergy Issue
- In June 2007, a software utility (GMRA429)
was provided to automate mapping of existing
free-text patient allergy entries to standard
entries.
80Free-text Allergy Issue
- Remaining free text allergy entries were either
too ambiguous to be reliably mapped, or may
contain multiple reactants. - Examples
- Misspelled - Penacillin
- Combined items Tylenol with Codeine
- Assorted Other entries - Misc. Molds
81Free-text Allergy Issue
In January 2008 The OI HDI Patient Safety Office
in conjuction with the National Center for
Patient Safety issued a Patient Safety Alert
requiring that the remaining free text allergy
entries be resolved.
82Discuss Impact of Data Integrity on Patient Safety
83 Data Integrity
-
- The causes of medication errors are
miscommunication, miscalculations,
workload/staffing problems, interruptions,
increases in knowledge and technology demands and
incomplete documentation - (IOM, 2004b)
84 Data Integrity
- Roadmap for charting delivery of care
- Used for decision making and patient response to
therapy - Assist as a reference to recall information
during handoff - Used for historical information
- Used for performance improvement
- Staff and patient education
- Joint Commission readiness
- Used for litigation
85 Documentation
- If it wasnt charted it wasnt done
86 Documentation
- Document at the time or soon as possible (Humans
are good at recognizing, poor at recall) - Avoid accepting verbal orders without proper
documentation - Be vigilant with documentation-use cognitive
cues, checklist and other job aids to ensure all
medications and other care are documented in a
timely manner - Ensure documentation reflects the time actions
were carried out
87-
- Computers and information systems can make
important fundamental contributions toward
creation of safe systems through improving access
to information, reducing reliance on memory,
increasing vigilance, and contributing to
standardization of processes. -
Kilbridge and Clasen -
JAMIA, April 2008 -
88 Summary
- OI HDI Patient Safety mission, vision and
possesses - Patient safety and human performance
- Role of staff in IT patient safety
- Examples of IT patient safety initiatives
- Impact of data integrity and information
management on patient safety
89 Patient-Centric IT Care
90- Thank you for attending this education session
- Please refer question to the OI HDI Patient
Safety Office team - via e-mail
- VHA OI HDI Patient Safety
- Have a SAFE and enjoyable stay in Tampa
91 Acronyms
92Web Sites - User Centered Design Societies
- Human Factors and Ergonomics Society (HFES)
- http//www.hfes.org/
- The Usability Professionals Association (UPA)
- http//www.upassoc.org/index.html
- ACM-Special Interest Group on Computer-Human
Interaction (SIGCHI) - http//sigchi.org/
- Society for Technical Communications (STC)
- http//www.stc.org/chapter_search.asp
93Other Learning Links
- FAA Human Factors ONLINE Training
- http//www.hf.faa.gov/Webtraining/index.htm
- Human Computer Interaction Bibliography
- Extensive Links to academic researchers and other
human computer interaction resources - http//www.hcibib.org/education/
94Other Learning Links
- http//www.usableweb.com/
- http//usability.gov/
- http//www.edwardtufte.com/
- http//www.moma.org/exhibitions/2005/safe/
- http//www.idsa.org/IDEA2007/gallery/index.htm
95Bibliography
- Denning, S. (2005). The Leaders Guide to
Storytelling Mastering the Art and Discipline of
Business Narrative. New York John Wiley
Sons, Inc. - Dumas, J. and Redish, G. (1993). A Practical
Guide to Usability Testing. Norwood, NJ Ablex. - Hackos, J and Redish, J. (1998). User and Task
Analysis for Interface Design. New York John
Wiley Sons, Inc. - Kuniavsky, M. (2003). Observing the User
Experience A Practitioners Guide to User
Research. San Francisco Morgan Kaufmann.
96Bibliography
- McLaughlin, R. (2003). Hospital Extra
Redesigning the Crash Cart, in American Journal
of Nursing. Volume 03, Number 4, pages 64a
64f. Philadelphia Lippincott, Williams and
Wilkins. - Nielsen, J. (1993) Usability Engineering.
Boston AP Professional. - Nielsen, J. and Mack, R. (1994). Usability
Inspection Methods. New York John Wiley
Sons, Inc. - Norman, D. (1986). User-Centered System Design.
New Jersey Lawrence Erlbaum Associates,
Publishers. - Preece, J., et al. (1994). Human Computer
Interaction. Boston Addison Wesley.
97Bibliography
- Rogers, E.M. (1995). Diffusion of Innovations.
New York Free Press. - Rubin, J. (1994). Handbook of Usability Testing.
New York John Wiley Sons, Inc. - Sawyer, D. (1996). Do It By Design. Us
Department of Health and Human Services, Public
Health Service, Food and Drug Administration,
enter for Devices and Radiological Health.
http//www.fda.gov/cdrh/humfac/doitpdf.pdf - Stone, D., Jarrett, C., Woodroffe, M. and
Minocha, S. (2005). User Interface Design and
Evaluation. San Francisco Morgan Kaufmann.
98Bibliography
- Tufte, Edward (1997). Visual Explanation.
Cheshire, CT Graphics Press. - Tufte, Edward (1990). Envisioning Information.
Cheshire, CT Graphics Press. -
- Tufte, Edward (1983). The Visual Display of
Quantitative Information. Cheshire, CT
Graphics Press. - Wiklund, M. and Wilcox, S. (2005). Designing
Usability into Medical Products. Boca Raton, FL
CRC Press. - Zachary, W. (1988). Decision Support Systems
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Handbook of Human-Computer Interaction, M.
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