setting the stage for managing risk in reproductive medicine: an ounce of prevention is worth a...

40
Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc. Auxogyn, Inc.

Upload: phyllis-bailey

Post on 29-Dec-2015

214 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine:

An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure

Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Auxogyn, Inc.

Page 2: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Setting the Stage for Managing Risk Management in Reproductive Medicine

Learning Objectives

At the conclusion of this lecture, participants will be able to•Discuss the role of the informed consent process in risk management and identify resources for informed consent in the IVF setting.•Understand the difference between standard of care and legal requirements and how this affects fertility practices.•Enumerate tissue banking risks that affect the IVF practice and may require remedial action.•Integrate basic risk management strategies into practice operations.

Page 3: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Planning Ahead, Managing Risk, Identifying Liability

Risk Management is the gathering of information to reduce uncertainty, and

making a decision based on information.

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 4: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

What is Risk?

Risk is the possibility of suffering a loss:

• Loss of quality outcome

• Loss of professional reputation/credibility

• Loss of patient or staff safety, health (life?)

• Loss of profitability

• Loss of success

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 5: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Managing Risk

• Identify sources of risk (What can go wrong?)

• Evaluate processes that lead to high impact risks

• Devise systems to monitor high risk activities

• Use data from this monitoring to improve functions

• Develop response plan for the system failures

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 6: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Sources of Risk in Reproductive Medicine

• Informed Consent process• Patient Identification and Specimen Labeling• Tissue Banking and use of stored cells/tissues• Inadequate or inappropriate resources: Staff,

equipment, etc.• Lack of leadership, professional responsibility• Inadequate SOPs or “changes” in methods without

authorization or knowledge (DRIFT)• Preparation of solutions/reagents• Change in payor mix, insurance coverage or self pay

patients (Financial)Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 7: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Standard of PracticeStandard of Care

Industry Standards

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Defining and Benchmarking Best Practices

Page 8: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

The Standard of Care• What would another reasonable and

comparable practice have done?

• Standard of care may be established de facto as a result of litigation.

• ASRM Guidelines establish some standards of care.

• New SART Consents

• Geography does not usually affect ART!

• AVOID ISOLATION!Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 9: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Standards• Developed, reviewed and amended by a consensus

process.• Identifies specific, essential requirements for

materials, methods, or practices.• Must be used in an unmodified form.• Any discretionary components clearly indicated.• Recognized as a means of demonstrating

conformance.• May become mandatory when adopted by outside

organizations in regulations.

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 10: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Role of Industry Standards in Insulating Against Liability

• Up to Date

• Regularly Reviewed

• Accurate

You cannot insulate yourself against negligence!

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 11: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Examples of Standards Applicable in Reproductive Medicine

• AATB Tissue Banking Standards

• Some ASRM/SART Policies and Guidelines

• KEY POINT: They are not mandatory and have no enforcement component

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 12: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Standard of Care

Versus

Regulatory Requirements

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 13: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Regulations

• Developed by government agency under legislative mandate

• May arise from:– Need for good practices– Societal, political or other considerations

• Opportunity for public comment

• Enforcement by responsible agency

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 14: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Examples of Regulations Applicable in Reproductive Medicine

• CLIA 1988

• Fertility Clinic Success Rate and Certification Act (Wyden Law)

• FDA Regulations on Tissue Banking

• KEY POINT: They ARE mandatory and have SIGNIFICANT enforcement components

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 15: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Minimizing and Managing Risk is a

Team Responsibility

You must identify risk in order to manage it well!

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 16: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

The Informed Consent Process :Because You’ve Never Enjoyed Walking On

Egg Shells: Scenarios

Page 17: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Patient Identification

• At least two methods to identify patients.• Clear identification of first and last name as sex

of patient.• Beware of Cultural contexts in Patient ID• Patient should give name; don’t prompt!• Process not a signature• Golden Moments!• Double witnessing invites failure!

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 18: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Informed Consent Process:A Nursing Challenge

Contracts and Consents

Involved Parties Ownership of Gametes

Execution Process

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 19: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

New SART Consent Formswww.sart.org (Members)

•  Introduction to ART 

•  In-Vitro Fertilization Document •  Recipients of Donor Eggs Document •  Disposition of Embryos Declaration •  Information for Gestational Carriers and Intended

Parents •  Egg Donation Document •  Egg Cryopreservation Information •  Disposition of Eggs Declaration 

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 20: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

New SART Consents:Purpose

• Redraft the consents in lay person’s terms

• Remove gender specific and dated terms in an era of same sex marriage

• Provide a method to change disposition of gametes and embryos after storage

• Address changing state laws re: donor gametes

• Freezing of eggs is no longer experimental

• Formalize the method of signing (notary)Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 21: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Consents and Contracts are ONE Focus of Risk Management

• They establish the terms and conditions of the relationship.

• They define the parties to the agreement.• They bring attention to the risks and benefits of the

procedures.• They outline the process and define the expected and

reasonable outcomes.• They set the stage for expectations.• They provide a pathway for withdrawing consent.• They do no excuse negligence!• Don’t eliminate risk or need to defend again error.

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 22: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Risk Management: Group Behavior

• All members of the group must adhere to the same standards

• No one member may accept risk on behalf of the rest

• Don’t confuse duplication of effort with managing risk

• Operate within your area of competence

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 23: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

“Ownership” of Gametes and Embryos

• Autologous Sperm under the exclusive control of the Sperm Source (Not the Spouse)

• Frozen Autologous Eggs under the exclusive control of the Egg Source (Not the spouse)

• Disposition of embryos requires the consents of both Gamete Sources or Parents

• Stage setting for ownership with unmarried couples.

Page 24: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Execution of Consents

• Both members of the couple must sign in ink.

• Each signature should be witnessed.

• Witness/patient signature date must match.

• Witness may be a staff member but not one who may “benefit” from the process.

• If notarized, each signature must be notarized.

Page 25: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Execution of Consents

• Were any alterations made to the consents?• Was the complete consent returned (not just signature

page)?• Are the consents current?• Verify the type of gamete covered?• Did both gamete sources/parents sign?• Is there any reason to doubt the accuracy or validity of

the consent?• Were consents received prior to treatment?

Page 26: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Updating Consents: How Often and When

• Once per year when patient is in active treatment• Whenever there is a change in the consent form• If therapy is stopped for more than a few months• If frozen stored sperm samples are used after a break in

therapy• For each new frozen embryo transfer• Ensure the identity of both partners• Periodically verify continued partner consent

Page 27: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Disposition of Abandoned Embryos

ASRM Ethical Statement

www.asrm.org

Page 28: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

“Abandoned Embryos” ASRM Definition

• More than 5 years have passed without contact with couple.

• Diligent efforts have been made to contact couple by phone, mail and registered mail.

• No prior written instructions concerning disposition.• Terms of the consent signed by the couple should

prevail.

Page 29: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

ASRM Ethical Statement on Abandoned Embryos

• It is ethical to dispose of abandoned embryos

• The Center must be diligent about attempting to contact the couple

• The embryos should not be donated to another couple

• The embryos should not be used for research

Page 30: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Cryopreservation/Storage ConsentEssential Components

• Maximum Length of Storage.• Instructions in event of death, divorce, failure to pay

storage fees, inability to agree on disposition or failure to notify Center of their whereabouts.

• These directives may be changed in writing.• That the Center may dispose of embryos if embryos

are “abandoned”• Willingness to store does not imply storage in

perpetuity.

Page 31: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Disposal Consents• Contains Patient MR# or other unique ID

• Current Patient Information (Address and Phone Numbers)

• Specifies the type of gamete to be disposed

• Verification that signature of “original” partners have been provided

• Actual Disposal witnessed by another staff member

• Beware of Imposters and Name Errors

Page 32: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Moving Patient Samples Center to Center

• Individual patient consents required• NO BLANKET OR GROUP CONSENT• Verify the exact conditions for transfer• Document the condition of the shipper and

samples at shipping and receipt• Document patient ID and quantities• Do not accept the liabilities of another Center• Use witnesses where appropriate

Page 33: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Risk Management Strategies

• Team effort

• Review processes not procedures

• Increasing staff is not the only or even best answer

• Two methods of identification (not duplicates)

• Continuous improvement of quality not increase in paperwork or procedures.

Page 34: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Medicine Bermuda Triangle

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Lawyers RegulationsPOOR RISK

MANAGEMENT

Consents Labeling

Inventory/Record Keeping

Competitors

Patient Identification

Monitoring TrendsIdentifying and Planning for Risks

Page 35: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Risk Management in the IVF Program:Personnel

• Competency Based Training

• Use of Per Diem Staff (TRAINING)

• Auditing Existing staff performance

• “Trust” between staff members biggest liability

• OSHA REGS and Part Time Staff

• System for monitoring

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Page 36: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Risk Management and Quality Improvement

• Quality is “fitness for use”, duty of care and best practices

• Plan-Act-Evaluate-Improve-Plan

• Leadership and Education are key

• Measurement and Feedback are Integral

• Undetected incidents and trends cannot be improved.

Page 37: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproduced with the permission of Cryo Med

Tissue Banks: A Major Source Of Risk

Page 38: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Reproductive LaboratoriesThe Biggest Sources of RISK

• The use of the wrong sample

• The mislabeled sample

• The missing sample

• The sample left behind

• The sample that could have been used…

• The mistaken disposal

• Poor records on the “mix and match”

Page 39: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Risk: SOPs, Revisions, Reagents

• Written not spoken word• Following procedures as written (by all)• Annual review and revision• If a form requires a “write in” it needs revision• Following the “spirit” and the “letter” of the procedures.• Using the correct reagents and materials• “Drift” decreases quality and increases risk• SOPs do not vary with volume

Page 40: Setting the Stage for Managing Risk in Reproductive Medicine: An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure Marybeth Gerrity, Ph.D., HCLD Reproductive

Reproductive Medicine Bermuda Triangle

Reproductive Biology Resources, Inc.

Lawyers RegulationsPOOR RISK

MANAGEMENT

Consents Labeling

Inventory/Record Keeping

Competitors

Patient Identification

Monitoring TrendsIdentifying and Planning for Risks