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Patient Hand-Offs Sheri S. Crow, MD, MS Assistant Professor of Pediatrics Critical Care Medicine Mayo Clinic Rochester, MN.

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Presentation on theme: "Patient Hand-Offs Sheri S. Crow, MD, MS Assistant Professor of Pediatrics Critical Care Medicine Mayo Clinic Rochester, MN."— Presentation transcript:

1 Patient Hand-Offs Sheri S. Crow, MD, MS Assistant Professor of Pediatrics Critical Care Medicine Mayo Clinic Rochester, MN

2 Intensive-care medicine has become the art of managing extreme-complexity ……and a test of whether such complexity can, in fact, be humanly mastered. NewYorker 2007

3 Hand-Off Statistics During 24 ICU hours the average patient experiences: 178 individual actions per day Nurse/doctor errors in 1% of these actions 2 errors/day/patient Handover failures account for: 20% of U.S. malpractice claims Half of sentinel events involving communication breakdowns (Joint Commission Report) Post-operative handovers: common area for communication breakdown.

4 Requirement for Success “hold the odds of doing harm low enough for the odds of doing good to prevail”

5 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YS_llfT2kQc http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQ4SVzxbp7Y&feature=related

6 Formula One Pit Stops A multi-professional team comes together as a single unit to effectively perform a complex task.

7 Overcoming the Odds Do Checklists Really Work????

8 An ICU Fairy Tale

9 Checklist intervention Peter Pronovost: Johns Hopkins Goal: Reduce central line infections Central line checklist: Wash hands with soap Clean the patients skin with chlorhexadine antiseptic Use sterile drapes Wear sterile mask, gown, gloves Place sterile dressing over catheter site.

10 Checklist Implementation Month 1: Observation Nurses document checklist compliance At least 1 missed step > 1/3 of procedures Month 2: Intervention Nurses authorized to stop doctors violating protocol steps Nurses asked each day if lines could be removed

11 Results Significant decline in line infections: After 1 year: 11% to 0. After 2 years: 1 line infection/year Prevention of 43 infections and 8 deaths Savings of 2 million dollars Next project: Ventilator associated pneumonia (VAP) Non-compliance with VAP prevention protocols decreased from 70% to 4% Pneumonia dropped by 25% 21 fewer patients died than previous year ICU length of stay dropped by half

12 Keystone Initiative Within 3 months: Infection rate decreased by 60% Michigan ICU infection rates: Worst national rates to top 10%. Within 18 months saved: 175 million dollars 1500 lives Success persists almost 4 years later

13 Why they work? Assist with memory recall Specify the minimum expected steps in a complex process.

14 Intra-operative Checklist

15

16 Haynes AB et al. N Engl J Med 2009;360:491-499

17 Operative Theatre to ICU Hand-Offs

18 Three Parts to a Successful Handover 1. Equipment and Technology Handover 2. Information Handover 3. Discussion and Plan Catchpole et al Pediatric Anesthesia 2007

19 Sample Checklists: Post-op Handover Patient information: Patient details Medical history Allergy status Name of procedure Current status of patient Anesthetic information Type of anesthesia Intraop anesthetic course Anticipated post-op problems Monitoring and range for physiological parameters Analgesia plan Plan for IV fluids Anesthesia contact number Surgical information Intra-operative surgical course Blood loss Antibiotic plan Medication plan-drugs to be restarted DVT prophylaxis Plan for tubes and drains NG tube and feeding plan Post-operative investigations Surgical contact number

20 Clinical Applications for Checklists Central Line Placement Compliance with Clinical Practice Guidelines: Ventilator associate pneumonia Operative Theatre to ICU handovers Change of Shift handovers Hospital to hospital transfer

21 Questions/Discussion


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