Patients get “recommended care” ~ 50% of the time. Adverse events occur in 10% of hospital patients. –50% are preventable. –7.5% of these patients die....the.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Insert name of presentation on Master Slide Lessons from the 1000 Lives Campaign Tuesday 29 March 2011 Dr Alan Willson.
Advertisements

© The Johns Hopkins University and The Johns Hopkins Health System Corporation, 2011 Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality CUSP for Safe Surgery:
Clinical Enterprise FY2012 Institutional Quality Pillar Goals Final.
Learning Session 1 Cape Town, February To reduce Healthcare Associated Infection (HAI) using a Systems Improvement approach Overall goal of BCA.
Washington State Hospital Association Partnership for Patients Safe Table Reducing Hospital Acquired Infections July 31, 2013 Amber Theel, Director Patient.
Dr. ABDULLAH ABDU ALMIKHLAFY Assistant professor & Head of community medicine department Presented By University of Science & Technology Sana’a – Yemen.
The case for change Time to Think Differently
Sean Berenholtz, MD MHS FCCM September 20, 2011 at 2ET/1 CT/12 MT/11 PT Ventilator Associated Pneumonia Prevention CLABSI Supplemental Call Series.
Don Wright, MD, MPH Deputy Assistant Secretary for Healthcare Quality Office of Healthcare Quality Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health U.S. Department.
+ Global Challenges in Patient Safety Reshma Ramachandran November 17, 2020.
2 Describe the historical and contemporary context of the Science of Safety Explain how system design affects system results List the principles of safe.
Leading the Best Care...Always! Campaign Dena van den Bergh, Michele Youngleson, Gary Kantor, Yolanda Walsh May 10 th 2011 Cape Town.
Hospital Harm Index Presentation to MAPS Exploratory Work Group for Tracking Safety Progress April 10, 2013.
2014 Summit Co-Convener:Founder: Patient Safety Science & Technology Summit 2014.
U.S. Dept of Health & Human Serviceswww.hhs.gov/ash/initiatives/hai/ Office of the Assistant Secretary for Healthwww.hhs.gov/ash/ohq/
CSTS: The Cardiovascular Surgical Translational Study Senior Leadership of Quality and Safety Initiatives in Health Care Peter J. Pronovost, MD, PhD The.
First, Do No Harm Falls work Karen O’Keeffe Clinical Lead Presentation 7 to National Falls Programme Expert Advisory Group meeting 13 July 2012, HQSC.
© 2009 On the CUSP: STOP BSI The Science of Improving Patient Safety.
Georgia Hospital Engagement Network HAI Affinity Group July 9 TH, :00 – 11:30 AM.
Model for Improvement and Tests of Change Denise Remus, PhD, RN Improvement Advisor, Cynosure Health / HRET HEN.
Indiana Healthcare Associated Infection Initiative Kickoff.
Is healthcare getting safer ? The challenge of measurement Charles Vincent Department of Psychology & Oxford Academic Health Science Network.
© 2009 On the CUSP: STOP BSI Overview of STOP-BSI Program.
Preventing Surgical Complications Prevent Harm from High Alert Medication- Anticoagulants in Primary Care Insert Date here Presenter:
Toward Eliminating Central Line Associated Blood Stream Infections.
The Cardiac Surgery Translational Study (“CSTS”) The Quality And Safety Research Group Ventilator Associated Pneumonia Prevention Sean Berenholtz, MD MHS.
Improving ICU Care Through Teamwork
Factors determining success in reduction of Central Line Associated Blood Stream Infection (CLABSI) on statewide levels HeeWon Lee, Doris Duke Clinical.
National Patient Safety Programme Clydebank 9 th November 2007.
Patient/Family Centered Safe Care: Putting Patients First Quality Improvement and Patient Safety Your Role in Patient/Family Centered Safe Care.
Who We Are ~Where We are Going. Slide 2 Workshop Objectives Describe the purpose and vision of the ICU Safe Care Initiative/Comprehensive Unit-Based Safety.
The Transformation Journey Jeanette G. Clough CEO, Mount Auburn Hospital Presentation to the Massachusetts Coalition to Prevent Medical Errors June 23,
Patient Hand-Offs Sheri S. Crow, MD, MS Assistant Professor of Pediatrics Critical Care Medicine Mayo Clinic Rochester, MN.
Two More E’s and How to Spread. Learning Objectives To think ahead about ways to make your investment of time and improvements in BSI rates last forever.
First, Do No Harm Northern Region patient safety campaign Jacqueline RyanKaren O’Keeffe Programme ManagerClinical Lead Peter LeongKelly FraherImprovement.
17 HAI Clinical and Financial Implications and Policy Future Peter B. Angood, MD, FRCS(C), FACS, FCCM Senior Advisor, Patient Safety, National Quality.
Improving Harm Across the Board. TEMPLATE GUIDE Treat harms as events that can be summed Focus on harms (outcomes) rather then preventive measures (process)
Learning Session 1 Gauteng, March 2011 Workbook. To reduce Healthcare Associated Infection (HAI) using a Systems Improvement approach Overall goal of.
ICU Safe Care Initiative/CUSP October 5, :00 am – 3:30 pm.
Research Utilization Project Nanncie Constantin NUR 590B.
OHA HEN 2.0 Ohio Hospital Association/Ohio Patient Safety Institute October 8, 2015.
Supporting NHS Wales to Deliver World Class Healthcare All Wales Stroke Services Improvement Collaborative Learning Session One 21 st October 2009.
Translating Evidence into Practice
Setting the scene 9 September 2010 Setting the scene Alan Willson 9 September 2010.
CUSP 4 MVP – VAP Quantitative Implementation Assessment 1: Aggregated Results Kisha Ali, MS Mayo Levering, BS September 2, 2014.
William B. Munier, MD Director, Center for Quality Improvement and Patient Safety Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality National Advisory Council.
Staff Safety Assessment 1. Learning Objectives To understand Step 2 of CUSP:Identify Defects To understand how to Implement the Staff Safety Assessment.
Sustaining Quality. “Expectations will always exceed capacity. The service must always be changing, growing and improving…”. Aneurin Bevan, 1948.
Governance & Standards What is happening internationally Triona Fortune, March 2016.
Epidemiology of Hospital Acquired Infections By Alena Bosconi, Candice Smith, Dusica Goralewski SUNY Delhi Biol , Infection and Disease Dr. Marsha.
Check a Box. Save a Life. The 1 st Global Student Sprint to Improve Healthcare October 22, 2009.
Healthcare-Associated Infection (HAI) and the Role of Diagnostic Testing 1 Date, time, presenter etc. goes here For external use © 2014 Alere. All rights.
Yousef I. Aljeesh, PhD, RN Said Abusalem, PhD, RN Naeem Alkariri, MSN, RN John A. Myers, PhD, MSPH Fawwaz Alaloul, PhD, RN Staff Developed IP Program Increases.
Hospital Engagement Network
Faculty of Medicine, Islamic University-Gaza
Enhanced Recovery After Surgery Alan Willson 17 November 2010
Critical Care Services Pharmacist Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital
Florida’s Hospitals: Five Years of Improved Quality
McQIC past, present, future
Staff Safety Assessment
Staff Safety Assessment
ICU Safe Care Initiative/CUSP November 16, :30 am – 3:30 pm
MCQIC: Phase 2 Prepared by: Bernie McCulloch
Ventilator Associated Pneumonia
Unit-Based Safety Program (CUSP)
Nursing Sensitive Indicator: RN Hours Per Patient Day (NHPPD)
Meta-analysis of risk ratios for percentage of patients who developed catheter-associated urinary tract infection, for intervention versus control groups,
Meta-analysis of risk ratios for percentage of patients who developed catheter-associated urinary tract infection, for intervention versus control groups,
Central venous catheter (CVC)-blood stream infection (BSI) rates.
Cost-effectiveness acceptability frontier for three risk-assessment strategies related to pressure-injury prevention best practices from a US societal.
Presentation transcript:

Patients get “recommended care” ~ 50% of the time. Adverse events occur in 10% of hospital patients. –50% are preventable. –7.5% of these patients die....the gap between evidence and practice 1 NEJM 2003; 348: Qual Safety in Health Care 2008;17:

Hospital-Acquired Infection –Infection rates 5-10% –1.4 million patients affected each day –USA 100,000 deaths, $6.5 billion / yr JAMA 2009;301(12): Lancet 2008;372(9651):

Allegranzi B. Burden of endemic health-care-associated infection in developing countries: systematic review and meta- analysis. Lancet Dec Number of HAI studies

Healthcare-associated infections are 2-3 x more common in developing countries 4

SA Hospitals? –9.7% HAI point prevalence –28.6% in ICU Prof A Duse. SA-HISC study (unpublished) 5 Private + Public Hospitals in Gauteng

1 in 7 patients who enter SA Hospitals are at risk for developing an HAI Brink A et al., SAMJ 2006; 96(7) 6

Delegate Survey, FIDSSA Conference Aug % In the hospital(s) with which I am associated… 7

Why BCA? Better care, less harm Build the capacity to improve 8

9

10 Finding leverage and synergy to achieve sustainable, high quality health care …more quickly …at greater scale Power of leverage and synergy Leverage: doing something smart that has a much bigger impact. Synergy: two or more people produce more together than the sum of what they could have produced separately. 10

Why an Open Learning Session? Overcome fear The method is new (or is it?) Don’t compete on safety More ideas More fun 11

Why an Open Learning Session? 12

HAI Impact On the patient & family On you? On the hospital? Financial? 13

14

15

Results…Michigan (Keystone) 66% reduction in line-related infection Saved > 1,500 lives Saved $200 million in 18 months New England Journal of Medicine. 2006; 355(26):

17

HAI : CLABSI RATE Central Line Associated Blood Stream Infections - CLABSI 18

Ventilator Associated Pneumonia VAP 19

20

VAP: Benchmarking Baptist Memorial DeSoto 21

Surgical Site Infections – SSI 22

HAI : SSI RATE 23

BCA : COMPLIANCE : SSI 24

25

Making improvements Holding the gains over time Spreading results Challenges for all Nations 26

27 Frontline health professionals CEOs and senior leadership 27

28

29

30

31

32

“nobody has perfect execution anywhere in the world” Dr Brent James 33

“in our work, the hardest part was trying to get nurses more comfortable speaking up” Dr Peter Pronovost

Copyright ©2010 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. Pronovost, P. J et al. BMJ 2010;340:c309 35

36 Results…Canada Target: 50% reduction in CLI. 75% of hospitals reached national goal of <1.9 infections / 1000 catheter-days.

37 Current improvement initiatives? TARGET – Sustainable, consistent, best practice 37