bring order to hospital communication chaos

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BRING ORDER TO HOSPITAL COMMUNICATION CHAOS Real Solutions to Common Communication Problems

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Page 1: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

BRING ORDER TO HOSPITAL COMMUNICATION CHAOS

Real Solutions to Common Communication Problems

Page 2: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

LET’S GO BACK IN TIME

Hospital communications used to be a lot simpler:

Find a Key Phone Number

Look for number you needed on a grease board

Change an On-Call Schedule

Revise paper charts in on-call schedule binder

Find a Doctor

Dial 0 and the operators would connect you or send a page on your behalf

Page 3: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

TODAY: ISLANDS OF INFORMATION

Communications across healthcare have become progressively more convoluted.

Page 4: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

PROBLEM: DISCONNECTED ISLANDS OF INFORMATION

Systems/Applications SENDING

• Patient movement• Employee directory• Building security and

monitoring• Electronic medical records• Critical lab and radiology

results• Patient-specific monitors• Nurse call• And more

Devices RECEIVING

• Smartphones• Cell phones• Desk phones• Wi-Fi phones• Pagers• Voice badges• Tablets• Email systems• LED boards• And more

Page 5: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

SOLUTION: CONNECT THE ISLANDS

Flexibility of inputs

Flexibility of outputs

MODES OF INTEGRATION

• SMTP• HL7• API• URL

Page 6: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

PROBLEM: OVERWHELMED NURSES

Heart monitors

Physician consults

Nurse call requests

Ventilators

Pulse oximeters

Page 7: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

TYPICAL NURSE CALL WORKFLOW

Change in patient status or patient pushes nurse call

button

Beep in the room or at a central nurse’s station

indicates need for follow-up

Appropriate nurse tracked down, nurse walks to

patient’s room to assess and assist

Page 8: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

SOLUTION: SINGLE SIGN-ON CAPABILITY

Staff assignment software with a single sign-on capability filters, prioritizes, and routes all patient alarms and alerts to a nurse’s mobile device

Page 9: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

PROBLEM: ALARM FATIGUE

alarm conditions per day - per bed350

• Bad data or sensor• Not set to actionable levels• Duplicate alarms• Thresholds too tight•Many false positives• Closed doors make it difficult to hear alarms

85-99% of alarms are non-actionable

http://www.aami.org/htsi/SI_Series/Johns_Hopkins_White_Paper.pdf

Page 10: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

• Reduce accidents and falls (and unreimbursed costs of associated care) by speeding response to requests for assistance

• Handle patient concerns and requests quickly with less overhead paging – promotes quiet healing and high patient satisfaction scores

• Escalate requests automatically to keep response times down

HOW SPOK CLINICAL ALERTING HELPS

MEET SAFETY GOALS

SOLUTION: CLINICAL ALERTING

JOINT COMMISSION COMPLIANCE

FALLS, ACCIDENTS (AND COSTS) PATIENT SATISFACTION SCORES

COMBAT ALARM FATIGUE

Page 11: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

PROBLEM: MISSING HANDOFF POINTS

Test results only matter if they’re received, and they may be going to the wrong person or too slowly if your hospital doesn’t have standard communication processes in place

Journal of the American College of Radiology Volume 8, Issue 11 - November 2011 Pages 776-779

MOST COMMON PROBLEMPatient didn’t receive test results

SECOND-MOST COMMON PROBLEMClinician didn’t receive test results

Page 12: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

SOLUTION: DIRECT THE FLOW OF INFORMATION

Blood panel ordered on

patient

Critically low potassium

triggers alert to physician for

immediate action

Page 13: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

SOLUTION: DIRECT THE FLOW OF INFORMATION

Actionable alert for room 203 sounds in the

telemetry room

With one button, telemetry tech

forwards alarm to patient’s nurse

Nurse receives alarm on mobile device,

accepts alert, immediately triages

patient, and launches Code Blue

Coordinated, life-saving treatment is

delivered to the patient quickly

Page 14: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

PROBLEM: INFO ISN’T GOING TO THE RIGHT PEOPLE

LABRESULTS

ROOM TURNOVER REQUESTS

PAIN MGMT

INQUIRIES

SUPPLY REFILL

REQUEST

Page 15: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

SOLUTION: INTEROPERABLE COMMUNICATION

Patient in pain calls for nurse

Nurse receives message, hits call-back number embedded in

message, and is connected with

patient’s pillow speaker

Nurse notifies physician that a

new prescription is needed.

Physician enters order remotely.

Nurse is able to quickly deliver

pain relief

Page 16: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

SOLUTION: SPOK MOBILE

• Device diversity

• Escalations for unanswered messages

• Full integration with the hospital directory & on-call schedules

• Receive alarms and alerts from nurse call, patient monitors, Lab, Radiology, and EMR systems

Page 17: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

PROBLEM: LACK OF SUPPORT FOR DIVERSE DEVICES

Page 18: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

SOLUTION: SUPPORT DEVICE DIVERSITY, PREPARE FOR URGENT SITUATIONS

Page 19: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

• Advises average 90-minute “door-to-balloon” time

– American Hospital Association

– American College of Cardiology

• All hospitals must track this metric

• ‘Code STEMI’ at Spok customer IU Health Goshen Hospital

– 129-minute average

– Time wasted with extra calls

– Uncertainty about who should do what

EXAMPLE URGENT SITUATION: CODE STEMI

Page 20: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

THE CODE STEMI ALERT: BEFORE SPOK

Manual Paging

Manual Phone Tree

Wasted Time

Unconfirmed Responses

RESPONSE TEAM• Cath lab staff • House supervisor• ICU shift

coordinator/nurses

• Attending cardiologist• Cardiovascular

coordinator• ER director• Cardiovascular director

• ER shift coordinator• X-ray/imaging

technicians• Lab technicians

Heart Attack Balloon Successful

Over communicate to ensure proper response

Inefficient phone trees among 30

people

Page 21: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

THE CODE STEMI ALERT: WITH SPOK

Heart Attack Treatment Successful

Staff Respond w/Availability

Use Spok e.Notify to Deploy Code

Spok e.Notify Manages Response & Escalation

RESPONSE TEAM• Cath lab staff • House supervisor• ICU shift

coordinator/nurses• Attending cardiologist• Cardiovascular

coordinator

• ER director• Cardiovascular

director• ER shift coordinator• X-ray/imaging

technicians• Lab technicians

Spok e.Notify• Logic for on-call calendar• Auto escalations based on

responses or non responses from staff

• Eliminates manual calling trees and messy escalations

Page 22: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

THE RESULTS

• Reduced average door-to-balloon time from 129 to 68 minutes

• Improved response time and patient care

• ER operator or house supervisor sends code STEMI notification to 30 staff

• Staff members respond with status

• Escalations and follow-ups as necessary

• Process review after each event to improve wherever possible

Page 23: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

PROBLEM: HARD TO REACH COLLEAGUES

Spyglass Consulting Group Health Care Study: Healthcare without Bounds:Point of Care Communication for Physicians. November 2014Point of Care Communication for Nursing. March 2014

Spyglass Consulting Group Health Care Study: Spok Secure Messaging Survey. September 2013

Page 24: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

SOLUTION: MAKE CLINICAL CONNECTIONS EASY

Page 25: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

PROBLEM: UNPROTECTED PERSONAL HEALTH INFORMATION (PHI)

1.2MAverage cost of a healthcare data

breach per organization

Of healthcare organization security

incidents result in lost PHI

60% 20%Of healthcare leaders

expressed HIPAA, HITECH concerns for devices lost, stolen,

or hacked

https://www2.idexpertscorp.com/resources/single/third-annual-benchmark-study-on-patient-privacy-data-security/r-generalhttp://cloud.spok.com/IG-AMER-Mobility-Strategies-2014.pdf http://www.himss.org/News/NewsDetail.aspx?ItemNumber=42944

Page 26: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

SOLUTION: SECURE, ENCRYPTED MESSAGING

• Provide security for ePHI

• Meet HIPAA and HITECH Act guidelines with a business associate agreement (BAA)

• Encryption via SSL connection – application, as well as data during transit and storage— Text, images and video files

• Remote device wipe and automated message removal

• Application screen lock and access code

Page 27: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

PROBLEM: NO AUDIT TRAIL

Reducing litigation expense is a major driver for communication systems with reporting capabilities• Est. 98,000 U.S. patients die

each year due to medical errors, often communication errors

• “Of malpractices cases... 75% are communication related”

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23204547

Page 28: Bring Order to Hospital Communication Chaos

IN REVIEW

The right INFORMATION: Clinical alerts and test results

The right PERSON: Reaching hospital staff and on-call providers

The right DEVICE: Smartphone, tablet, pager, Wi-Fi phone

The right TIME: Speed and effectiveness

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