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Safety
Activities
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- Patient
Safety Studies
Both epidemiologic studies and randomized trials have
shown that many Surgical Site Infections (SSIs) are preventable
with appropriately timed antibiotic prophylaxis. Unfortunately,
errors in antibiotic prophylaxis timing are extremely common
with error rates reported to be between 35 - 40%. Since
this problem is common and the consequences of the error
so grave, identifying methods to assist hospitals in improving
antibiotic timing is a high priority. Florida Hospital is
participating in the baseline data collection for the TRAPE
project. This project is under the combined efforts of the
Society of Healthcare Epidemiology of America, JCAHO and
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
- Clinical
Best Practice
Clinical
Best Practice = Improved Quality and Safety
Clinical
Best Practice ("CBP") goals are to reduce process
variation, improve quality, and preserve resources through
prudent utilization. CBP pathways and order sets result
from systematic medical literature reviews and physician
consensus to assess its validity and application to a specific
patient population. CBP is based on
Evidence-Based
Medicine ("EBM"). EBM is a fundamental change
in how medical problems are solved. In contrast to the traditional
paradigm of medical practice observation, intuition, authority
and theory are insufficient grounds to define standards
of care.EBM recognizes the complexity of healthcare and
places a hierarchy on decision making. CBP also acknowledges
physician preferences and patient values through understanding
potential risks and benefits with their decisions.
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MedMined
Infection Surveillance System
National
Patient Safety Goals --
Joint Commission
Florida
Hospital Safety Activities
"Speak
Up" Program
Patient
Safety Links
Environment
of Care
SHARE
Your Ideas
Safety
Home
Rights and Responsibilities |
From a safety
perspective, legibility, consistency, appropriate dosing of medication,
optimum medication and patient knowledge have a powerful potential
to improve understanding and reduce errors. Reduction of process
variation through clinical order sets and pathways that are based
on EBM establishes a consistent standard of care, high reliability
and quality.
- Patient
Safety Initiatives
Florida
Hospital values and continually strives for improvements in patient
safety. Across the Florida Hospital system, our hospitals are
engaged in the pursuit of improvements in patient and clinical
quality. In addition to implementation of the JCAHO National Patient
Safety goals, we have an active process that monitors patient
safety across all areas. Our patient safety team has members from
leadership, patient care, laboratory, pharmacy, radiology, environment
of care, risk management and infection control. We closely monitor
key indicators related to patient, visitor, employee and environmental
safety. Some of these are patient falls, bloodstream infections,
medication event reporting, visitor safety, water and air quality,
and immunization. We strive to think safety-always- for-everyone.
- National
Quality Forum 30 Safe Practices
The National
Quality Forum (NQF) is a diverse group of stakeholders with
the purpose of driving organizations to adopt evidenced based
best practices to reduce the risk of harm to patients.
The NQF
report lists 30 healthcare practices derived from a report by
the Agency for Healthcare Research and Qualitys University
of California, San Francisco Stanford University Evidenced-Based
Practice Center, The Leapfrog Groups three safety leaps,
NQF Steering Committee and members, and health professional
specialty societies responding to NQFs open call for suggested
safety practices.
The practices
are organized in five categories for improving patient safety:
- Creating
a culture of safety
- Matching
healthcare needs with service delivery capability
- Promote information
transfer and clear communication
- Adapting
safe practices in specific clinical care settings or for specific
processes of care; and
- Increasing
safe medication use
We are conducting
a gap analysis of the NQFs 30 safe practices to make recommendations
for future implementation.
Once the gaps
have been identified, action plans will be developed to address
the gaps
National
Quality Forum Safe Practices
1. Create
a healthcare culture of safety.
2. For designated high-risk, elective surgical procedures or other
specified care, patients should be clearly informed of the likely
reduced risk of an adverse outcome at treatment facilities that
have demonstrated superior outcomes and should be referred to
such facilities in accordance with the patients stated preference
3. Specify an explicit protocol to be used to ensure an adequate
level of nursing care based on the institutions usual patient
mix and the experience and training of its nursing staff
4. All patients in general intensive care units (both adult and
pediatric) should be managed by physicians having specific training
and certification in critical care medicine (critical care certified)
5. Pharmacists should actively participate in the medication-use
process, including, at a minimum, being available for consultation
with prescribers on medication ordering, interpretation and review
of medication orders, preparation of medications, dispensing of
medications, and administration and monitoring of medications.
6. Verbal (including telephone orders) should be recorded whenever
possible and immediately read back to the prescriber, i.e. a healthcare
provider receiving a verbal order should read or repeat back the
information the prescriber conveys in order to verify the accuracy
of what was heard.
7. Use only standardized abbreviations and dose designations.
8. Patient care summaries or other similar records should not
be prepared from memory.
9. Ensure that care information, especially changes in orders
and new diagnostic information, is transmitted in a timely and
clearly understandable form to all of the patients healthcare
providers/professional who need that information to provide care.
10. Ask each patient or legal surrogate to recount what he or
she has been told during the informed consent discussion.
11. Ensure that written documentation of the patients preference
for life-sustaining treatments is prominently displayed in his
or her chart.
12. Implement a computerized prescriber order entry system.
13. Implement a standardized protocol to prevent the mislabeling
of radiographs.
14. Implement standardized protocols to prevent the occurrence
of wrong-site procedures or wrong-patient procedures.
15. Evaluate each patient undergoing elective surgery for risk
of an acute ischemic cardiac event during surgery, and provide
prophylactic treatment of high-risk patients with beta-blockers.
16. Evaluate each patient upon admission, and regularly thereafter,
for the risk of developing pressure ulcers. This evaluation should
be repeated at regular intervals during care. Clinically appropriate
preventive methods should be implemented consequent to the evaluation.
17. Evaluate each patient upon admission, and regularly thereafter,
for the risk of developing deep vein thrombosis / venous thromboembolism
(DVT/VTE). Utilize clinically appropriate methods to prevent DVT/VTE.
18. Utilize dedicated anti-thrombotic (anticoagulation) services
that facilitate coordinated care management.
19. Upon admission, and regularly thereafter, evaluate each patient
for the risk of aspiration.
20. Adhere to effective methods of preventing central venous catheter-related
blood stream infections.
21. Evaluate each pre-operative patient in light of his or her
planned surgical procedure for the risk of surgical site infection
(SSI), and implement appropriate antibiotic prophylaxis and other
preventive measures based on that evaluation.
22. Utilize validated protocols to evaluate patients who are at
risk for contrast media-induced renal failure, and utilize a clinically
appropriate method for reducing risk of renal injury based on
the patients kidney function evaluation.
23. Evaluate each patient upon admission, and periodically thereafter,
for risk of malnutrition. Employ clinically appropriate strategies
to prevent malnutrition.
24. Whenever a pneumatic tourniquet is used, evaluate the patient
for risk of ischemic and/or thrombotic complication and utilize
appropriate prophylactic measures.
25. Decontaminate hands with either a hygienic hand rub or by
washing with a disinfectant soap prior to and after direct contact
with the patient or objects immediately around the patient.
26. Vaccinate healthcare workers against influenza to protect
both them and patients from influenza.
27. Keep workspaces where medications are prepared clean, orderly,
well lit, and free of clutter, distraction and noise.
28. Standardize the methods for labeling, packaging, and storing
medications.
29. Identify all high alert drugs and improve the safety of using
high-alert medications (e.g. identify and improve safety of using
the following; intravenous adrenergic agonists and antagonists,
chemotherapy agents, anticoagulants and anti-thrombotics, concentrated
parenteral electrolytes, general anesthetics, neuromuscular blockers,
insulin and oral hypoglycemics, narcotic and opiates).
30. Dispense medications in unit-dose or, when appropriate, unit-of-use
form, whenever possible.
- Influenza
and Pneumococcal Vaccination
At Florida
Hospital we are constantly looking at promoting the health of
our patients. We have created an initiative to offer the flu and
pneumonia vaccines to our patients admitted to the hospital. Once
you are admitted you will receive a brochure on both the flu and
pneumonia vaccines.
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