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Quality, Safety, and Reliability in Healthcare Delivery

Paradox of Plenty. 2. Most advanced healthcare system in the worldHigh Cost, Low QualityFor the money the United States spends on healthcare, about $2.5 trillion a year the quality of care is unacceptably lowEach year as many as 15 million patients harmed in some manner by America's healthc

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Quality, Safety, and Reliability in Healthcare Delivery

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    1. Northeast regional patient safety & quality improvement conference Rhode Island Hospital February 5, 2011 H. John Keimig, MHA, FACHE President & CEO Quality Partners of Rhode Island Quality, Safety, and Reliability in Healthcare Delivery

    2. Paradox of Plenty 2 Most advanced healthcare system in the world High Cost, Low Quality For the money the United States spends on healthcare, about $2.5 trillion a year – the quality of care is unacceptably low Each year as many as 15 million patients harmed in some manner by America’s healthcare system

    3. Health Care Spending per Capita 3

    4. Life Expectancy at Age 65 4

    5. Infant Mortality Rate 5

    6. Deaths Due to Surgical or Medical Mishaps per 100,000 Population 6

    7. Variation in Cardiac Care from State to State 7

    8. Quality Efforts in Healthcare 8

    9. Quality Efforts in Healthcare 9 Quality in healthcare… …what is it? It depends

    10. Quality Efforts in Healthcare 10 Quality pioneers have different opinions: Dr Joseph Juran – “fitness for use” Philip Crosby – “zero defects” Dr Edwards Deming – “never-ending cycle of continuous improvement”

    11. Quality Efforts in Healthcare 11

    12. Quality Efforts in Healthcare 12 Quality in healthcare originally defined by those who provided it American Medical Association circa 1850 Abraham Flexner Report, 1910 – Carnegie Foundation Ernest Codman, 1910 - Mass General American College of Surgeons, 1917 – Hospital Standardization Program

    13. Quality Efforts in Healthcare 13 Joint Commission formed - 1952 Followed ACS “minimum standards” American Medical Association American College of Physicians American Hospital Association 1966 - “Optimal achievable standards” Federal Government - 1965 Medicare signed into law Conditions of Participation

    14. Quality Efforts in Healthcare 14 Federal Medicare and Quality Initially “quality” efforts were punitive in nature Length of stay variation and “bad apples” 1995 – CMS began movement of education and collaboration on QI and PS initiatives via state-based Medicare Quality Improvement Organizations (QIOs) State Governments Initial focus on physician and other practitioner licensure More recent focus on hospitals and “incidents”

    15. Movement to data-based quality assessment 15

    16. Quality Assurance vs. Quality Improvement 16

    17. Those who pay for care are now writing the “Quality Agenda” using data Federal Government QIOs Medicare Compare Joint Commission “deemed status” State Governments Increased licensing requirements State review boards Public report cards Corporations Leapfrog Business health coalitions Private Insurers Pay for performance Patient Centered Medical Homes Consumer Groups Rankings and advisory groups HealthGrades.com Angie’s List 17

    18. Those who pay for care are now writing the “Quality Agenda” using data

    19. Healthcare Quality – Keep it Patient Focused 19 Doing the right thing, the right way, at the right time, in the right amount, for the right patient that does not result in harm to the patient

    20. But… Our Challenge in Healthcare 20 “Medicine used to be simple, ineffective and relatively safe… …Now it is complex, effective and potentially dangerous” Sir Cyril Chantler UK Health Policy Advisor Former Dean, Guy’s, King’s and St. Thomas Medical and Dental Schools

    21. 21 Most American hospitals are safe for the vast majority of patients, the vast majority of time The vast majority of patient care givers are well trained and conscientious Western medicine’s ability to save and extend human life is nothing short of miraculous… however… ~100 K avoidable hospital deaths Hospital medical errors costing between $20 – 30 billion 2+ million hospital acquired infections 5% to 7% of all hospital admissions involve an adverse drug event (ADE) and another 10% experienced the risk of an ADE

    22. Quality and Patient Safety 22 If the patient is not safe from accidental harm, then high-quality healthcare cannot exist

    23. What do we mean by Patient Safety? 23 A culture that embraces the reduction of medical errors, complications, and other unanticipated adverse events which contributes to improved clinical outcomes through the adoption and management of evidence-based practices, processes, and systems

    24. What do we mean by Patient Safety? 24 Distinction between patient safety issues (errors) and quality concerns Operating on the wrong knee (error) vs. not using the proper surgical approach (quality) Overdosing a diabetic patient on insulin (error) vs. failing to properly control a patient’s diabetes (quality) Illegible prescription order (error) vs. not prescribing the most effective antibiotic (quality)

    25. 25 Focus on Patient Safety

    26. Characteristics of a Quality Healthcare System when the Appropriate Systems are in Place 26 It is safe It is effective It is efficient It is patient centered It is equitable It is timely

    27. 27 Factors that create the fertile ground for medical errors and mistakes: Our God given inherent limitations of human performance The evolution of our present healthcare culture

    28. 28 Complexity of healthcare compared to just 10 years ago… pharmaceuticals, bio-technology, use of complex technology, and increasing types of modalities.Complexity of healthcare compared to just 10 years ago… pharmaceuticals, bio-technology, use of complex technology, and increasing types of modalities.

    29. 29 Blame Game: We look for who screwed up or who was holding the smoking gun. Blame Game: We look for who screwed up or who was holding the smoking gun.

    30. 30 Most medical errors are made by well intentioned, well educated, well trained human beings who have become accustomed small glitches, routine foul-ups, and a culture that suppresses doing anything much about them in the name of overriding goals

    31. 31 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wp3m1vg06Q Joint Commission National Patient Safety Goals. Give example of mandated read-back requirement give comparison to Chinese restaurant reading back order More to move the safety ball down the field Joint Commission National Patient Safety Goals. Give example of mandated read-back requirement give comparison to Chinese restaurant reading back order More to move the safety ball down the field

    32. 32 Human Factors Error Reduction Strategies incorporated into processes and systems Avoid reliance on memory Standardization Checklists Forcing Functions Checklists Eliminate look-alikes Create redundancy Joint Commission National Patient Safety Goals. Give example of mandated read-back requirement give comparison to Chinese restaurant reading back order More to move the safety ball down the field Joint Commission National Patient Safety Goals. Give example of mandated read-back requirement give comparison to Chinese restaurant reading back order More to move the safety ball down the field

    33. 33 Other high risk industries have “gotten it” There is a business case for them Airlines build time into schedules for forced safety Little direct financial impact to hospitals and physicians until recently Southwest Airlines Examples Example – 19 steps to administer antibiotics to a septic patient in ED Southwest Airlines Examples Example – 19 steps to administer antibiotics to a septic patient in ED

    34. 34 Airline pilots, who once behaved very much like physicians today, accepted this cultural shift once they understood that doing so could prevent their own death

    35. 35

    36. 36 H. John Keimig, MHA, FACHE President & CEO Quality Partners of Rhode Island 235 Promenade Street Suite 500 - Mail Drop Box 18 Providence, RI 02908 401.528.3238 jkeimig@QualityPartnersRI.org

    37. Quality Efforts in Healthcare 37 http://www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov/Hospital/Search/compareHospitals.asp http://www.qualitycheck.org/consumer/searchResults.aspx?ddstatelist2=RI&ddcitylist=&st_cd=&st=RI&st_nm=RHODE+ISLAND&cty_nm=&cty_id=-1&provId=2&provIdtracker=2 http://www.health.state.ny.us/statistics/diseases/cardiovascular/docs/pci_2004-2006.pdf http://www.leapfroggroup.org/cp?frmbmd=cp_listings&find_by=city&city=Boston&state=MA&cols=oa

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