Recommended toolkit: Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

29
Safer Healthcare Now! Atlantic Node RECOMMENDED TOOLKIT: SPREAD & SUSTAINABILITY OF BEST PRACTICES Sujani Jayanetti September 9 th , 2009

description

Recommended toolkit: Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices. Sujani Jayanetti September 9 th , 2009. Safer Healthcare Now! Atlantic Node. Introduction. Patient safety is an international, national, and local issue - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Recommended toolkit: Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Page 1: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Safer Healthcare Now! Atlantic Node

RECOMMENDED TOOLKIT: SPREAD & SUSTAINABILITY OF BEST PRACTICES

Sujani JayanettiSeptember 9th, 2009

Page 2: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Introduction2

Patient safety is an international, national, and local issue

The range of adverse events that occur in healthcare facilities are astonishing.

Adverse events are unintentional unfavorable events that are due to healthcare management rather than the patient’s disease which may lead to extended hospital stay, disability, or even death (Baker et al. 2004).

Page 3: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Introduction

Adverse events may occur due to many reasons including; infections, medical errors, dangerous omission, incorrect procedures, incorrect diagnosis, and lack of effective team communication.

USA- Hospital Acquired Infections cause 90,000 deaths annually; costing $ 5 billion (Vincent 2006)

Canada- 70,000 adverse events (37%-51% are preventable) (Baker et al. 2004)

3

Page 4: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Introduction

Canadian Patient Safety Institute (CPSI)- 2003

Safer Healthcare Now! (2005)- Based on 100,000 Lives Campaign in the US

Ten evidenced based interventions

4

Page 5: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

SHN! Ten Evidence Based Interventions

1. Deploy Rapid Response Teams/ Quick Response Teams (RRT/ QRT) 2. Deliver Reliable, Evidence-Based Care for Acute Myocardial

Infarctions (AMI) 3. Prevent Adverse Drug Events (ADEs) 4. Prevent Central Line Infections 5. Prevent Surgical Site Infections (SSI) 6. Prevent Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia 7. Prevent harm from antibiotic resistant organisms 8. Medication Reconciliation in long term care to reduce adverse drug

events in long term care settings 9. Prevent harm resulting from falls in long-term care settings 10. Prevent Venous Thromboemoblism (VTE)

5

Page 6: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Why participate in spread of best practices

Patients’ and carers’ [service] expectations are increasing Wide variation in outcomes and processes between practitioners

and organizations is no longer acceptable New technology is available to improve care and delivery processes What worked in the past won’t necessarily work in the future Shortages of resources, notably time, to invent own solutions If your neighboring colleagues and organizations are improving by

copying and re-inventing good practice, why aren’t you?

Source: Fraser 2002, p. viii

6

Page 7: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Make it Happen!!! 7

Source: Greenhalgh et al. 2004, p.593

Page 8: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

IHI Spread Framework8

Source: Massoud et al. 2006; IHI n.d.

Page 9: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Sustainable Organizations9

The IHI Get it Started Kit lists 6 properties that exist in organizations that have shown sustainability of interventions:

1. Supportive Management Structure2. Structures to “Foolproof” Change3. Robust, Transparent Feedback Systems4. Shared Sense of the Systems to Be Improved5. Culture of Improvement and a Deeply Engaged Staff6. Formal Capacity-Building Programs

Source: 5 Million Lives Campaign 2008

Page 10: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Focus Group10

May 22, 2009 WebEx 6 Participants Atlantic Provinces: Nova Scotia, New

Brunswick, Newfoundland Aim: To understand the barriers and success

factors to spread and sustainability of best practices in Atlantic Node SHN!

Page 11: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Focus Group- Emerging themes11

Necessity for a culture change towards patient safety Need for proper leadership & champions Need for clinician involvement Necessity for adequate communication The need for monitoring, measuring, and providing

feedback of interventions The need for more resources (staffing, measurement

resources, training) The false perception that patient safety alone is a good

enough incentive

Page 12: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Survey 12

Created using themes from focus group

34 questions

Sent to 53 key stakeholders in Atlantic Canada: NB, NL, NS, & PEI

45% response rate

Page 13: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Survey Results- Respondents13

Page 14: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Survey Results- Culture

Majority responded- Organizational structure supports patient safety and quality improvement work

Two third responded - quality improvement is nonnegotiable

Two third responded- has a history of sustaining quality improvement work

54% responded- structures in place to sustain and hardwire quality improvement work.

14

Page 15: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Survey Results- How important is patient safety work to:

15

Page 16: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Survey Results- Within your organization there are patient safety champions among:

16

Page 17: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Survey Results- Education & Training

54% of direct care providers see a positive change

33% of the time physician champions involved in SHN! interventions

50% agreed roles and responsibilities are clearly defined; 25% some progress is being made

95% agreed there needs to be more training continued education

17

Page 18: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Survey Results- Communication

58% responded patient and family perspectives guides quality work; additional 12% said these perspectives were used

Need to be considered since they are clients and contributes to system and behavioural change.

Staff surveys used third of the time; ½ of the organizations use leadership walkabouts

18

Page 19: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Survey Results- Monitoring and Improvement measures

75% of respondents use measurements 42% reported quality improvement data are

displayed in easy to read charts and posted in clinical areas

Only 54% understand what the results of the collected data mean

19

Page 20: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Survey Results- Incentives

96% reported the intrinsic value in providing safer care and was a good incentive to get staff on board

Critical element to improving care However, insufficient for change in behaviour Rewards and recognition necessary Note: Calgary Health Region found physician

buy in difficult without financial incentives (Baker et al. 2008)

20

Page 21: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Survey Result- Resources21

Page 22: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Eleven Recommendations

1. Steering Committee for SHN! interventions2. Develop and use a formal improvement

spread plan3. Monitoring, measuring, and feedback4. Closer integration, engagement,

communication among healthcare providers5. Physician champions for all SHN!

interventions

22

Page 23: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Eleven Recommendations

6. Champions not only at the frontline, but also senior leaders

7. Staff and healthcare provider input is needed8. Training and education9. Safety Competency Framework by CPSI10. Recognition and rewarding achievers11. Compiling and sharing how patient and family

perspectives are brought to organizational and provincial decision tables

23

Page 24: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Take home message:

The whole organization from the Board of Directors to the point of service teams and individuals must be aligned in their efforts towards patient safety improvement and great outcomes. There is a need to take a holistic approach in strengthening all components of the system to maximize patient safety outcomes.

A chain is only as strong as its weakest link!

24

Page 25: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Tips &Tools New Idea Scorecard Adoption Exercise Project Charter Team Charter PDSA Cycles Quality Improvement and Change Implementation Quality Tools Improvement Tracker Dr. Jan Davies as a consultant Walkabouts Patient Safety Rounds Physician Quality Officers Spread planner Spread Check List Checklist for Readiness to Spread

25

Page 26: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Questions26

Page 27: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

Acknowledgement

Theresa Fillatre: [email protected]

Dannie Currie: [email protected]

Pauline MacDonald Focus Group Participants Survey Respondents

27

Page 28: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

References Baker, G. R., Norton, P. G., Flintoft, V., Blais, R., Brown, A., Cox, J. Etchells, E.,

Ghali, W. A., Majumdar, S.R., O’Beirne, M., Palacios-Derflingher, L., Reid, R.J., Sheps, S., Tamblyn, R. (2004). The Canadian Adverse Events Study: the incidence of adverse events among hospital patients in Canada. JAMC, 170(11), 1678-1686.

Baker, G. R., MacIntosh-Murray, A., Porcellato, C., Dionne, L., Stelmacovich, K., & Born, K. (2008). High Performing Healthcare Systems Delivering Quality by Design. Toronto: Longwoods Publishing Corporation.

Fraser, S. W. (2002). Accelerating the Spread of Good Practice. A Workbook for Health Care. United Kingdom: Kingsham Press.

Greenhalgh, T., Robert, G., MacFarlene, F., Bate, P., Kyriakidou, O. (2004). Diffusion of Innovation in Service Organizations: Systematic Review and Recommendations. Milbank Quarterly, 82(4), 581-629.

IHI. (nd). Case for Improvement. Retrieved on July 4, 2009, from http://www.ihi.org/IHI/Topics/Improvement/SpreadingChanges/SpreadCaseforImprovement.htm.

28

Page 29: Recommended toolkit:  Spread & Sustainability of Best Practices

References Massoud, M.R., Nielsen, G.A., Nolan, T., Schall, M.W., Sevin, C. (2006). A

Framework for Spread: From Local Improvements to System-Wide Change. IHI Innovation Series white paper. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Institute for Healthcare Improvement. Retrieved on July 21, 2009, from http://www.ihi.org/NR/rdonlyres/661BCB93-1FED-4ADB-86FE-4DDD84445AFD/0/AFrameworkforSpreadWhitePaper2006.pdf

5 Million Lives Campaign. (2008). Getting Started Kit: Rapid Response Teams. Cambridge, MA: Institute for Healthcare Improvement. Retrieved on July 21, 2009, from http://www.saferhealthcarenow.ca/EN/Interventions/RRT/Documents/RRT%20Getting%20Started%20Kit.pdf.

Vincent, C. (2006). Patient Safety. Toronto: Elsevier Limited.

29