orientation lecture to patient safety aspects

26
Introduction to Patient Safety Dr. Shailendra.V.L. Patient Safety Department Al Bukeriya general hospital

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Page 1: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Introduction to Patient Safety

Dr. Shailendra.V.L.Patient Safety Department

Al Bukeriya general hospital

Page 2: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Outline

• Introduction to the concept of Patient Safety• Occurrence Variance Report (OVR)– Adverse Events– Near Miss– Sentinel Events

• International Patient Safety Goals

Page 3: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

SECTION-I

INTRODUCTION TO THE CONCEPTOF

PATIENT SAFETY

Page 4: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Patients and Medical Errors

• Healthcare errors impact 1 in every 10 patients around the world (WHO)

• Institute of Medicine, USA found in a study:-– Medical errors injure 1 in 25 hospital patients– Kills about 44,000 to 98,000 every year– Medical errors costs USA billions of dollars each

year

Page 5: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Risk Comparison• Less than one death per 100,000 encounters– Commercial airlines– Nuclear power generation– Off shore oil rigs

• One death in 1,000 – 100,000 encounters:– Motor vehicle driving– Chemical manufacturing

• More than one death per 1,000 encounters– Bungee jumping– Mountain climbing– Health care

Page 6: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Why Errors?“To err is human”

• Not always willful negligence but systemic flaws• Inadequate communication• Wide-spread process variation• Patient ignorance

Every error has a root causeEvery cause has a solution

Errors can be prevented with every one’s participation in the system

Here comes the role of the patient safety department

Page 7: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Patient Safety

• Patient safety is a new healthcare discipline that emphasizes on – Reporting– analysis, and– prevention ofmedical errors that may leads to adverse patient

outcomes

Page 8: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Patient Safety• Goals of Patient Safety– Detection of safety issues– Preventive & corrective actions– Processes to reduce risks

• Broad Strategies– Self reporting (OVR)– Safety oriented Leadership Walk Rounds– Communication / education– MOH – Patient safety standards monitoring– Promoting patient safety culture

Page 9: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

SECTION-II

OCCURRENCE VARIANCE REPORT (OVR)

Page 10: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Sources of Errors

1. Individual made: Errors due to human factor in the process e.g. wrong calculations of dosage

2. System made: Holes in the system that allow to slip through e.g. no clear, detailed policy, no double checking systems

3. Environment made: Hazards that come from the environment of the hospital e.g. emotions, dangerous medicines, radiation hazards

Page 11: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

How to Make it Safer

• Acceptance, not denial• Identifying the causes of the medical errors

and patient harm• Finding solutions• Improving systems

Page 12: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Identifying the Causes

• Significant patient harm• Patient complaints• Colleagues reporting• Management trying to detect• Self Reporting i.e. OVR

Page 13: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Occurrence Variance Report (OVR)

• Self Reporting – corner stone of improvement– Voluntary reporting of process variation by all

health care workers– Non punitive – no punishments– To improve the quality of services– To prevent recurrence of same errors – To target system, not individuals

Page 14: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Types of Events

1. Adverse Event: Any variation in the processes leading to unsafe situations in everyday working life

2. Near Miss: An event or situation that could have resulted in patient harm but did not, either by chance or timely intervention

3. Sentinel Event: Unexpected incident involving death or serious physical or psychological injury or the risk thereof

Page 15: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Example

• An inpatient received 2 (two) unit of the incorrect type of blood at the time. The patient’s blood was drawn for a type/cross match, the sample was mislabeled with another patient's name. The transfusion was given to the patient whose name appeared on the type/cross match lab report, not the patient whose blood was in the lab specimen vial.

Page 16: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Examples of Reportable Events

• Eclampsia in booked patient• APGAR score less than 7 at 5 minutes• Unplanned blood transfusion• Wrong implant or prosthesis• Injury or unplanned repair or removal of an organ• Complications post ERCP• Complications post angiogram • Retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) needing laser

Page 17: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

SECTION-III

INTERNATIONAL PATIENT SAFETY GOALS

Page 18: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

International Patient Safety GoalsGoal 1: Identify patients correctlyGoal 2: Improve effective communicationGoal 3: Improve the safety of high-alert

medicationsGoal 4: Ensure correct-site, correct-procedure,

correct-patient surgeryGoal 5: Reduce the risk of health care–associated

infectionsGoal 6: Reduce the risk of patient harm resulting

from falls

Page 19: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Goal 1

• Identify Patients Correctly– Wrong-patient errors occur in virtually all aspects

of diagnosis and treatment – At least two patient identifiers• File number• Name

– Before• Administering medications, blood, or blood products • Taking blood and other specimens for clinical testing

Page 20: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Goal 2

• Improve Effective Communication– Verbal and telephone order or test result is• written down by the receiver• then read back by the receiver, and• confirmed by the giver

– Reporting back of critical test results and panic values

Page 21: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Goal 3

• Improve the Safety of High-alert Medications– Medicines with high risk of patient harm

– Policies to address the location, labeling, and storage of concentrated electrolytes

Page 22: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Goal 4

• Ensure Correct-site, Correct-procedure, Correct-patient Surgery– Mark surgical site identification and involve the

patient in the marking process

– Use time-out procedure before starting a surgical procedure

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Goal 5

• Reduce the Risk of Health care–associated Infections– Implement an effective hand hygiene program

– Catheter associated infections

Page 24: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Goal 6

• Reduce the Risk of Patient Harm Resulting from Falls– Policies to reduce the risk of patient harm

resulting from falls – Implement initial assessment of patients for fall

risk and reassessment when indicated – Implement measures to reduce fall risk for those

assessed to be at risk

Page 25: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

Conclusion

• Identification and prevention of patient harm

• Self reporting the events

• Adherence to the Six International Patient Safety Goals

Page 26: Orientation lecture to Patient safety aspects

THANK YOU