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The Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program (CUSP):

The Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program (CUSP):. An intervention to learn form mistakes and improve safety culture www.safercare.net. Learning Objectives. To understand the steps in CUSP To learn how to investigate a defect

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The Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program (CUSP):

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  1. The Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program (CUSP): Aninterventiontolearnformmistakesandimprovesafetyculture www.safercare.net

  2. Learning Objectives • To understand the steps in CUSP • To learn how to investigate a defect • To understand some teamwork tools such as daily goals, AM briefing, Shadowing

  3. Safety Score CardKeystone ICU Safety Dashboard CUSP is intervention to improve these

  4. Pre CUSP Work • Create an ICU team • Nurse, physician administrator, others • Assign a team leader • Measure Culture in the ICU(discuss with hospital association leader) • Work with hospital quality leader to have a senior executive assigned to ICU team

  5. 71 Teamwork Climate 2008 67 Teamwork Climate 2007 64 Teamwork Climate 2006 62 Teamwork Climate 2005

  6. 70 Safety Climate 2008 65 Safety Climate 2007 60 Safety Climate 2006 59 Safety Climate 2005

  7. Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program (CUSP) An Intervention to Learn from Mistakes and Improve Safety Culture • Educate staff on science of safety http://www.safercare.net • Identify defects • Assign executive to adopt unit • Learn from one defect per quarter • Implement teamwork tools Pronovost J, Patient Safety, 2005

  8. Science of Safety • Understand System determines performance • Use strategies to improve system performance • Standardize • Create Independent checks for key process • Learn from Mistakes • Apply strategies to both technical work and team work • Recognize teams make wise decisions with diverse and independent input

  9. Identify Defects • Review error reports, liability claims, sentinel eventsor M and M conference • Ask staff how will the next patient be harmed

  10. Prioritize Defects • List all defects • Discuss with staff what are the three greatest risks

  11. Executive Partnership • Executive should become a member of ICU team • Executive should meet monthly with ICU team • Executive should review defects, ensure ICU team has resources to reduce risks, and how team accountable for improving risks and central line associated blood steam infection

  12. Learning from Mistakes • What happened? • Why did it happen (system lenses) • What could you do to reduce risk • How to you know risk was reduced • Create policy / process / procedure • Ensure staff know policy • Evaluate if policy is used correctly Pronovost 2005 JCJQI

  13. To Identify most important contributing factors • Rate Each contributing factor • importance of the problem and contributing factors in causing the accident • importance of the problem and contributing factors in future accidents

  14. To identify most effective interventions • Rate Each Intervention • How well the intervention solves the problem or mitigates the contributing factors for the accident • Rates the team belief that the intervention will be implemented and executed as intended

  15. To evaluate whether risks were reduced • Did you create a policy or procedure • Do staff know about the policy • Are staff using it as intended • Do staff believe risks have been reduced

  16. Teamwork Tools • Call list • Daily Goals • AM briefing • Shadowing • Culture check up Pronovost JCC, JCJQI

  17. Call List • Ensure your ICU has a process to identify what physician to page or call for each patient • Make sure call list is easily accessible and updated

  18. AM briefing • Have a morning meeting with charge nurse and ICU attending • Discuss work for the day • What happened during the evening • Who is being admitted and discharged today • What are potential risks during the day, how can we reduce these risks

  19. Shadowing • Follow another type of clinician doing their job for between 2 to 4 hours • Have that person discuss with staff what they will do differently now they walked in another shoes

  20. Culture Check-UP • Pick you lowest three items on your culture score • Ask staff if this reflects their reality • Ask what it would be like if you scored 100% on this (eg what behaviors would people do) • Discuss what you can do to put those behaviors in place • Make a plan

  21. CUSP is a Continuous Journey • Add science of safety education to orientation • Learn from one defect per month, share or post lessons (answers to the 4 questions) with others • Implement teamwork tools that best meet the ICU teams needs • Details of CUSP are in the manual of operations

  22. * * * * * * * Statistically Significant

  23. #4. “I Would Feel Safe Being Treated Here As A Patient.” % of respondents within an ICU that agree

  24. #3. “Nurse Input Is Well Received In This ICU.” % of respondents within an ICU that agree

  25. "Needs Improvement“ Statewide Michigan CUSP ICU Results • Less than 60% of respondents reporting good safety climate =“needs improvement” • Statewide in 2004 84% needed improvement, in 2006 41% • Non-teaching and Faith-based ICUs improved the most • Safety Climate item that drives improvement: “I am encouraged by my colleagues to report any patient safety concerns I may have”

  26. Michigan ICU Safety ClimateScore Distributions

  27. Focus and Execute

  28. References • Pronovost P, Weast B, Rosenstein B, et al. Implementing and validating a comprehensive unit-based safety program. J Pat Safety. 2005; 1(1):33-40. • Pronovost P, Berenholtz S, Dorman T, Lipsett PA, Simmonds T, Haraden C. Improving communication in the ICU using daily goals. J Crit Care. 2003; 18(2):71-75. • Pronovost PJ, Weast B, Bishop K, et al. Senior executive adopt-a-work unit: A model for safety improvement. Jt Comm J Qual Saf. 2004; 30(2):59-68. • Thompson DA, Holzmueller CG, Cafeo CL, Sexton JB, Pronovost PJ. A morning briefing: Setting the stage for a clinically and operationally good day. Jt Comm J Qual and Saf. 2005; 31(8):476-479.

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