Re-Engineering Medication Processes to Capitalize on Technology. Jane Englebright, PhD, RN Vice President, Quality HCA
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1 Re-Engineering Medication Processes to Capitalize on Technology Jane Englebright, PhD, RN Vice President, Quality HCA
2 Who is HCA? % % % % U.K. % % % Switzerland % %% % % % % % %% % % % % % % % %% % % % % % % % %% % % %%% % % % % % % % % % % %%% % % % % % %% % % % %% % % %% %% % %% % % % % % %% % % % % % % %% % % % %% % % % % % %% % %% %% % % % % %% US 176 Hospitals 92 ASC s in 22 States INTERNATIONAL 8 Hospitals
3 Institute of Medicine Reports on Medical Errors First Report: December ,000 to 98,000 deaths/year 8 th leading cause of death in US Provocative Statements: Most errors are caused by system failures rather than human error All manual processes are subject to error Many error reduction efforts do not take advantage of information systems Conclusions Status quo is not acceptable 50% reduction of error over next 5 years
4 HCA Patient Safety Goals Establish patient safety as a visible commitment to putting patients first philosophy Move from blaming people to improving processes Improve use of technology to prevent and detect error Use data to identify and measure improvements
5 HCA Patient Safety Initiatives Bring Evidence-Based Patient Safety Practices to HCA Facilities to Address Areas of Concern for HCA Medication Safety Initiative Evidence- Based Patient Safety Practices: IOM Report ISMP Bates Areas of Concern for HCA: IOM Report Each HCA Facility Implements Evidence- Based Patient Safety Practices in Areas of Concern for HCA
6 The Medication Safety Initiative Included: Rank Order of Error Reduction Strategies Forcing Functions & Constraints Automation & Computerization Standardization & Protocols Checklists & Double-Checks Policies & Procedures Education & Information HCA Technologies emar epom High Risk Med Protocols Practice Guidelines Competencies Awareness & Education
7 Errors resulting in ADEs 0 % intercept 34% 6% 4% 56% 42% intercept Ordering Administration Transcription Dispensing Bates DW et al. Incidence of adverse drug events and potential adverse drug events. JAMA 1995;274:29-34.
8 Electronic MAR & Bar Coding
9 emar Safety Features Validates Five Rights of Medication Administration Requires patient specific clinical data for certain medications (i.e, pulse rate prior to administration Lanoxin, review of potassium level before giving Lasix). Sends a warning to alert nurse when the dose is to much or to little, or if the dose is being given to early or to late. Single source of truth for patient medication status.
10 HCA Clinical Information Systems
11 emar & Bar Coding Deployment 172 Sites in 5 years
12 emar & Bar Coding: (Company-wide Results-Year 2005) 115,933,163 Doses administered in 171 hospitals 2,913,018 Error warnings 2,121,315 Doses not given after warning Averted Errors
13 emar Implementation An interdisciplinary Steering Committee was responsible for planning; implementation; staff and physician education and management of any issues. Bar-coded Patient Armbands Bar-coded Medication Doses Bedside Verification Electronic Safety Checking Electronic Medication Administration Record & Charging
14 Expected Outcomes Fewer medication administration errors More complete documentation Staff perception of improved safety Patient perception of improved safety Improved accuracy of billing
15 Measurement Plan: Understanding the Impact Medication Administration Errors Completeness of MAR Accuracy of Charges User Perception of Improved Safety Pharmacist and Pharmacy Tech Perception of Workload Changes Incident reports Avoided errors Stories Chart audit Chart audit Survey Survey Armband Audit
16 Hospital Technology Change Process Change Physicians Culture Change HCA Patient Safety Implementation Model
17 emar Works in Three Ways Blunt End Policies, procedures, resource allocation systems Process Redesign Sharp End Monitored Process Direct caregiver ERROR Clinical Decision Support Reports Results
18 Project Timeline 6 7 months per hospital Pre- Assessment Barcoding Meds, Hardware, Dictionary Changes, Testing End User Training Post Implement Support Kick Off Go Live
19 Project Workload: Fluctuations over 6 months IT&S RT Nursing Pharmacy
20 Implementation Activities: Culture Executive Walk-Arounds Do No Harm video Verification not Scanning Patient Safety Principles: Double-Check
21 Implementation Activities: Process Functions Most Impacted.... Nursing Pharmacy Respiratory Care IT&S HIM Finance Quality & Risk
22 Process Re-Design Develop a workflow study of the actual steps in the medication preparation and delivery process at your facility Start at the patient and work backwards Include Nursing, Respiratory Therapy, and Pharmacy
23 Nursing Impact Model of care delivery Who do you want to give medications? Medication distribution system How do medications get from the pharmacy to the bedside?
24 Pharmacy Impact Accuracy and timeliness of order entry and turn around Bar Coding ALL medications Medication acquisition philosophy Override policy adherence
25 Creativity Wire Tie
26 Respiratory Care Impact Workflow: Sequential vs Concurrent Therapy Scheduling of medication administration Medication storage and distribution Clear accountability for medication administration Non-standard medication preparations Order acknowledgement processes
27 IT&S Impact New Member of the Clinical Team WLAN Installation and Support Computer Management Equipment Maintenance, including pharmacy equipment Downtime Processes
28 HIM Impact Single MAR for each admission Incorporate into discharge printing process
29 Finance Impact Move to billing on Administration instead of billing as Dispensed Improved Audit accuracy Improved Charge capture Decreased paybacks from insurance audits
30 Quality & Risk Impact Explaining it all to the Surveyor Averted errors = Near misses Areas with 100% utilization rates can have zero medication administration errors Preserving Quality Control Activities Order Acknowledgement Chart Checks
31 Practice Recommendations
32 Infection Control Recommendations Carts should be cleaned at least daily with hospital approved disinfectant Carts may be used in isolation rooms Carts should be cleaned before leaving the room if contaminated and when used in isolation Patient Safety equipment can be safely used in all patient care areas exception: Known SARS or Small Pox
33 Pediatric/NICU Recommendations Identify armband solution Newborn Pre-registration Processes Unit dose medications Bar code identification of Breast Milk and documentation of feeding
34 Psychiatric Recommendations Don t take the scanner into seclusion Consider alternative form factors for scanners Unit dose medications Special armband needs
35 Implementing emar Roll out in waves Bring up first 1 or 2 units First unit that mostly discharges patients Maintain for 1-2 weeks Troubleshoot and resolve issues as they arise Roll out remaining units quickly in related waves Turn on Admin Billing
36 Project Risks Packaging and labeling errors in pharmacy Changing federal regulations Emerging barcode symbologies Invalidating bedside verification with workarounds
37 emar & Bar Coding Accountability Structure Executive Sponsor Frank Houser, MD Quality Operations Sponsor Charlie Evans Eastern Group President Vice-President Jane Englebright, PhD, RN Patient Safety Patient Safety Team Leaders Quality, IT&S D&C, Risk, Communications Corporate CNO Council Business Owner Alicia Perry, PharmD Patient Safety emar Advisory Board Facility representatives Corporate SMEs Division CNO Workgroup Responsible Executive Facility CNO IT&S Software Testing Support Development Patient Safety Specialist Manisha Shah, RRT Patient Safety IT&S Implementation Team Implementation Coord Equipment Ordering emar Coordinator CNO appointed role HCA Corporate Quality HCA IT&S Organization Advisory Groups Operational Accountability Structure
38 Getting Staff to Use the Technology How is this going to help me do my job better? Why is this necessary? I didn t go to school to become a computer genius! I guess this keeps somebody employed! Just when I thought I had myself organized, they come up with something new!
39 Answering the Why? Keep the team engaged. Be patient as many do not adapt to change readily Communication e-mar benefits vs. expectations Focus on patient knowledge and patient safety Ongoing involvement of core team Keep the team focused on Patient Safety as a priority goal
40 Get it Right Equipment Analysis Pilot FIRST!!!! Communication Training/Education Troubleshooting Plan Competency Ongoing unit based resources
41 Leadership Strategies Staff Meetings PATIENT SAFETY STRESSED Expectations clearly communicated again Non-compliance outcomes discussed Accountability Mandatory Education & Competency Assessment Regular monitoring of usage reports Prompt follow-up on negative usage patterns
42 Leadership Makes a Difference Results from pilot hospital: Usage STATS improved within one week of implementing accountability plan. No formal disciplinary measures were required. Satisfaction scores improved!!! Goal %
43 Results Averted Errors Usage Staff Perception
44 First & Second quarter summary reports Malpractice claims related to medication administration have decreased by 16%
45 Pharmacy Perception Survey 50% 45% I believe use of the emar and bar coding system is reducing medication errors in my hospital. 40% 35% 30% 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% Very Satisfied Somewhat Satisfied Satisfied Dissatisfied Very Dissatisfied
46 Novice Staff Rely on e-mar! Pt. history - allergies etc Lab link Reminder to document BP/HR/Pain Scale Checks and balances Look alike sound alike drugs Unusual doses flagged Realistic expectations
47 emar Maintenance Work Software Equipment Culture transformation Process change
48 emar & Bar Coding The Way We Do Meds at HCA Single point of accountability within each hospital to assure optimal ongoing operation Corporate emar Advisory Committee to address Culture-Process-Technology issues Regular division meetings Monthly conference calls/quarterly web casts for sharing best practices and enhancements
49 the way we do things
50
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