a new tric an audit tool for multi-patient environments an audit tool for multi-patient environments...

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A New TRIC

An audit tool for multi-patient environments

Sue Ieraci 2013

Sue Ieraci 2013

What’s the Issue?A simple formula:

Focus on quality and safety+

Risk-aversion+

Unsophisticated clinical governance tools

Sue Ieraci 2013

What do we have now?Some format/combination of:• “Incident” reporting• Severity coding• ‘’Incident’’ Investigation• +/- Root Cause Analysis• Implementation of recommendations• Implementation audit

Sue Ieraci 2013

Anything wrong with RCAs?• Just one tool• Assumes there is always a ‘’root cause’’• Looks at individual patient care• Linear, not contextual• Focus on identifying errors• Doesn’t recognise an ‘’acceptable’’ error rate• Recommendations often not reality-tested

Sue Ieraci 2013

Acceptable complication rates

There is an accepted complication rate for:• Surgical procedures• Central line insertion• Therapeutic substances........

But NOT for COGNITIVE processes

Sue Ieraci 2013

‘’The London Protocol’’SYSTEMS ANALYSIS OF CLINICAL INCIDENTS

• Clinical Safety Research Unit, Imperial College London

• Beyond the RCA

• “Beyond the more usual identification of fault and blame.’’

• ‘’If the purpose is to achieve a safer healthcare system, then finding out what happened and why is only a way station in the analysis. The real purpose is to use the incident to reflect on what it reveals about the gaps and inadequacies in the healthcare system.’’

Sue Ieraci 2013

Why something different for EDs?THE MULTI-PATIENT ENVIRONMENT

• Multiple patients with competing interests• Prioritisation and compromise inevitable• Interruption and multi-tasking• Concurrent vs sequential patients• Undifferentiated patients• Team-input to process and outcomes• Patient journey• Everyone else has hindsight

Sue Ieraci 2013

Proposed methodology

TEAM REVIEW IN CONTEXTPrinciples:

• Examine the performance of the clinical team, in the context

of the ‘’episode’’• Use only the information available at the time (no benefit of

hindsight)• Consider whether the team-members involved in the complex

event made either cognitive or prioritisation errors with the resources and completing demands existing at the time

Sue Ieraci 2013

Components of the tool

1. Task complexity analysis / Process mapping

2. Prioritisation analysis

3. Cognitive analysis

4. Improvement potential analysis

5. Reality testing of recommendations

6. Conclusion

Sue Ieraci 2013

Task complexity analysis / Process mapping

• identifies the entire scope of the competing demands for care that were occurring during the episode and

• maps the care pathways of individual patients

Sue Ieraci 2013

Prioritisation analysis

• Examine competing priorities according to urgency of time-criticality for intervention and

• assesses whether there may have been avoidable errors in prioritisation that have impacted on patient outcomes

Sue Ieraci 2013

Cognitive analysis

• evaluation of the clinical decisions made by the individuals involved in the episode

• using only the information available at the time

• to look for any avoidable cognitive errorsCroskerry

Sue Ieraci 2013

Improvement potential analysis

• Could any any aspect of care potentially be sustainably improved within realistic resources?

Sue Ieraci 2013

Reality testing of recommendations

• Would any proposed recommendations realistically have changed the outcome?

• Are they are realistically achievable?

• Could they cause unintended consequences?

Sue Ieraci 2013

Conclusion

• Summarises the findings of the process

It is an acceptable option to conclude that no recommendations arise as a result of application of the tool.

Sue Ieraci 2013

Other essential features

• At least one team-member present at the time of the episode is on the team

• Team members are only given information that was available at the time

• The application of the tool should be recorded in the order of the steps specified above, so that each component flows logically into the next, and into a conclusion.

Sue Ieraci 2013

Acknowledgements

Cognitive collaborators

Philip Hoyle – Clinical governance

Deniz Tek – Cognitive error and cognitive autopsy

Spiritual Collaborators

All those people who have suffered the consequences of inappropriate or poorly-executed RCAs

Sue Ieraci 2013

A NEAT TRIC!

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