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The Transformation Journey

The Transformation Journey. Jeanette G. Clough CEO, Mount Auburn Hospital Presentation to the Massachusetts Coalition to Prevent Medical Errors June 23, 2009. Overview of the LEAD Program. A Blue Cross Blue Shield program aimed at supporting transformational change in health care.

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The Transformation Journey

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  1. The Transformation Journey Jeanette G. Clough CEO, Mount Auburn Hospital Presentation to the Massachusetts Coalition to Prevent Medical Errors June 23, 2009

  2. Overview of the LEAD Program • A Blue Cross Blue Shield program aimed at supporting transformational change in health care. • Health care institutions were chosen for their leadership and organizational commitment to quality and safety. • Participants were required to set “audacious” safety goals and provide monthly measures of progress toward these goals.

  3. Overview of the LEAD Program • LEAD encourages learning from experts in quality and safety. Monthly meetings with experts from around the world are held for the CEOs and the leadership teams. • LEAD provides a $1.5 million dollar stipend to support the transformational work. • LEAD is a 24 month program ending in March 2009.

  4. The Challenge • Mount Auburn was ready -to commit to more rigorous and accelerated action on quality and safety -to commit further resources of time and dollars -to set audacious goals and establish a timeline for goal achievement

  5. The Challenge The LEAD program was consistent with our belief that quality is a strategic imperative and with our organizational goals and guiding principles for quality and safety:

  6. Organizational Principles • Measurement and benchmarking Collection, interpretation and measurement of clinical, operational and financial metrics measured against the Hospital’s past performance and against national and “best performer” benchmarks.

  7. Organizational Principles • Transparency Sharing performance data against best practice benchmarks within the Hospital, the healthcare community and with the public to foster discussion, debate, competition and improvement.

  8. Organizational Principles • Uniting process with technology Using technology in the design and function of systems and processes in the delivery of care to improve efficiency, enhance communication, enable data collection and limit the potential for human error.

  9. Organizational Principles • Learning from error Examining and exhuming the causes of near or actual error followed by education, training, communication and change to prevent further errors from occurring.

  10. Organizational Principles • Linking employee and physician satisfaction with achievement of all organizational goals including quality and safety Carefully listening and responding to employees and physicians through a variety of methods as the foundation for meeting organizational goals and objectives.

  11. Setting the goals What would it take to become the safest hospital for the delivery of medications and eliminate any harm to patients from medications? Don’t all patients deserve to enter the Hospital and not be subject to a medication error? And don’t all employees deserve a safe system to deliver medications?

  12. LEAD Goal: Medication Safety • Use state-of-the-art technology to automate the process for medication delivery…from ordering to administering… in order to achieve “six sigma” reliability (less than 1 event per million doses administered) and to eliminate medication errors.

  13. Key Steps to Achieve the Goal • Automating the medication process -CPOE: ordering and decision support -PYXIS: dispensing -Talyst: bar coding of drugs and inventory management -”Smart pump” implementation: IV drug delivery -BMV: bedside med verification -EMAR: electronic med administration record

  14. Results: Medication Safety Mount Auburn has now achieved five sigma reliability and has had no Level 2-3-4 (events that reached a patient) events since Sept. 17, 2008. Mount Auburn has had a 67% reduction in medication events since LEAD began.

  15. Infection Prevention Goals • To achieve six sigma level of central blood stream infections: less than 1 CBI in 10/6th central line days in both ICUs • To achieve six sigma level of ventilator assisted pneumonias (VAPs): less than 1 VAP in 10/6th ventilator days in both ICUs • Identify, cohort and decontaminate to reduce hospital acquired MRSA infection by 50%

  16. Setting the goal What would it take to eliminate MRSA in the ICUs? What would it take to also eliminate all VAPs and CBIs? Can it be done?

  17. Results: Infection Prevention Mount Auburn has achieved a 68% reduction in central bloodstream infections over the two years of the LEAD program. Mount Auburn now has less than 1 CBI per 1000 central line days.

  18. Results: VAPs Mount Auburn has had a 50% decrease in VAPs during the two years of the LEAD program. Mount Auburn now has a rate of 1.25 VAP per 1000 ventilator days. (The rate is lower than 1.25 in the MICU and is approaching six sigma).

  19. Results: MRSA in the ICUs Mount Auburn has reduced MRSA CBI and VAP to six sigma levels with zero HAI MRSA infections in the ICU and CCU since October 06.

  20. Results :Cost Savings Mount Auburn has calculated total savings of the following from January 2006 thru April 2009: $813,629.65 for CBI reduction $1,132,593.00 for VAPs reduction $148,907.62 for med safety improvement

  21. Looking Back…. In 2006 Mount Auburn .. • had many strengths to build upon for LEAD • took the LEAD challenge seriously • set audacious and meaningful goals • Applied strategy, planning, teamwork and perseverance to achieve gains in both sets of goals

  22. Looking Back…. Despite the strengths we still had… • Early and late adopters • Some resisters and many doubters • Lots of infrastructure to put together • IS challenges • A huge $90M construction project going on • Lots of opportunity to be distracted

  23. Looking Back…. It would have been easy to get distracted…. • The economy started to crumble and collapsed • Investments and value of real estate plummeted • The competition got even hotter and nastier • The physician shortage grew larger

  24. Key Elements for Success • Strong organizational structure Committed and stable senior management and physician leadership Deep physician – hospital alignment Size of the organization

  25. Looking Back….Critical Elements to Success • Culture is absolutely key • Understanding the dynamics of change • Constancy of purpose –unwavering commitment • One step at a time –a strategic plan and timetable • Applying the four key principals: measurement and benchmarking, transparency, learning from error, uniting processes with technology

  26. Moving forward… • New norms have been established • Error or infection is a rare, if ever, event • Culture and roles are strengthened • Cost of care is reduced and efficiencies gained • Payment reform in the AQC allows us to focus even more on quality and safety

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