Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMargery Glenn Modified over 9 years ago
2
Annual Data Collected and Reviewed 1. Annual ADS Update - Streamlined ◦ Program Attrition ◦ Program Characteristics – Structure and Resources ◦ Scholarly Activity 2. Board Pass Rate – Rolling Rates 3. Clinical Experience (Case Logs) 4. Resident Survey 5. Faculty Survey – Core Faculty 6. Semi-Annual Resident Evaluation and Feedback ◦ Milestones ◦ Clinical Competency Committees 7. CLER site visits
3
Emphasizes the responsibility of the SI for the quality and safety of the environment for learning and patient care Also emphasizes addressing health care disparities Intent to improve quality and safety goals after graduation
4
Key institutional policies affecting residents: ◦ Transitions of care (patient handoffs) ◦ Supervision ◦ Duty hours, fatigue management & mitigation ◦ Professionalism Integration of residents into projects: ◦ Patient Safety ◦ Quality Improvement (Including health care disparities)
5
Support national efforts addressing patient safety, quality improvement, and reduction in health care disparities. Increase resident knowledge of and participation in safety activities and quality improvement. Monitor Sponsoring Institution maintenance of a clinical learning environment that promotes the six goals.
6
Initially, not for accreditation decisions ◦ Set expectations for the 6 focus areas and provide institutions with formative feedback CLER Evaluation Committee charged to set expectations for the 6 focus areas First cycle (18 months): information shared with ACGME/RCs will be de-identified and/or reported in aggregate. Second cycle: CLER Evaluation Committee will share relevant information from the CLER site visits with the IRC and RCs
7
Senior leadership initial and exit meetings: CEOs, DIO/GMEC Chair, Resident Member of GMEC Quality & Safety Leadership: Chief Safety Officer and Chief Quality Officer Residents/Fellows Core Faculty Program Director Walk-arounds
8
Organizational charts Supervision policy Duty hour policy Care transitions policy Patient safety protocol/strategy (approved by Board) Quality strategy (approved by Board) Quality & Safety Committee membership rosters (identifying resident members) DIO’s most recent annual report to SI governance
9
Patient Safety: relatively little resident reporting in PSN and viewed as a “black hole”; many didn’t know Patients are First goals Quality Improvement: Data from hospitals not readily available for QI projects; need to brand Housestaff Quality and Safety Council (HQSC); no strategy on health care disparities Transitions in Care: CORES is a best practice but could be more effectively used; observed a handoff without supervision Supervision: Policy template is a best practice; need to make policies and approved procedures available to nurses/care team Duty Hours/Fatigue: No significant duty hour concerns; insufficient fatigue training for faculty; need to improve fatigue monitoring Professionalism: Very strong education; residents know how to report concerns (too many avenues to report?)
10
Include residents in real, meaningful experiences ◦ Root cause analysis ◦ Protocol development ◦ LEAN/RPIW teams ◦ Patient safety reporting Obtain clinical effectiveness data Work with SI leadership, including safety and quality officers ◦ One should be on GMEC
11
Implement meaningful policies for supervision and duty hours Develop transitions of care protocols Provide fatigue management/mitigation training Develop monitored standards for professionalism Include residents in SI initiatives in patient safety, quality improvement, and addressing health care disparities
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.