N ATIONAL Q UALITY F ORUM. Safe Practices for Better Healthcare 2006 Update A CONSENSUS REPORT

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N ATIONAL Q UALITY F ORUM Safe Practices for Better Healthcare 2006 Update A CONSENSUS REPORT

NATIONAL QUALITY FORUM Foreword Every person who seeks care in a healthcare facility should expect to receive safe care that is delivered in a safe environment. Still, some five years after healthcare safety became a national imperative, uniform safety as a matter of course has not been achieved. Every day, patients are harmed, or nearly so, in healthcare institutions across the country. The harm is not intentional, but it nonetheless contributes to the suffering and even to the death of those who entrust their health and their lives to the healthcare system. We must do better. Every healthcare stakeholder group should insist that provider organizations demonstrate their commitment to reducing healthcare error by putting into place evidence-based safe practices and by learning from their mistakes and those of others within a blame-free culture of safety. In 2003, the National Quality Forum (NQF) endorsed 30 safe practices that should be universally utilized in applicable clinical care settings to reduce the risk of error and resultant harm to patients. This report adds to the practices and acknowledges their ongoing value. This revised set of NQF-endorsed TM safe practices has been updated with current evidence, expanded implementation approaches, and measures for assessing implementation of the practices. Each practice is specific, generalizable, and ready for implementation, and each has been shown to be effective and of potential benefit in improving healthcare safety. Systematic, universal implementation of the practices can lead to appreciable and sustainable patient safety improvement. We thank NQF Members and the Safe Practices Consensus Standards Maintenance Committee for their stewardship of this work. Their dedication to improving the safety of healthcare should be an inspiration and a challenge to all. Janet M. Corrigan, PhD, MBA President and Chief Executive Officer

2007 by the National Quality Forum All rights reserved ISBN 1-933875-07-0 Printed in the U.S.A. No part of this may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission of the National Quality Forum. Requests for permission to reprint or make copies should be directed to: Permissions National Quality Forum 601 Thirteenth Street, NW, Suite 500 North Washington, DC 20005 Fax 202.783.3434 www.qualityforum.org

III NATIONAL QUALITY FORUM Safe Practices for Better Healthcare 2006 Update Table of Contents Executive Summary... v Chapter 1 Summary, Background, and NQF-Endorsed TM Safe Practices... 1 Introduction... 1 Purpose... 2 The NQF-Endorsed Set of Safe Practices... 3 Criteria... 4 Box A. Criteria for Inclusion in the Set... 5 Box B. Criteria for Changes to an NQF-Endorsed Safe Practice... 6 Practices for Which Endorsement Was Withdrawn... 6 Table 1 Safe Practices, Care Settings, and Specifications... 7 Practices Recommended for Further Research... 34 Table 2 Practices Recommended for Further Research... 35 Additional Recommendations... 36 Chapter 2 Improving Patient Safety by Creating and Sustaining a Culture of Safety... 37 Safe Practice 1: Create and Sustain a Healthcare Culture of Safety... 39 Practice Element 1: Leadership Structures and Systems... 39 Practice Element 2: Culture Measurement, Feedback, and Intervention... 48 Practice Element 3: Teamwork Training and Skill Building.. 52 Practice Element 4: Identification and Mitigation of Risks and Hazards... 59 Chapter 3 Improving Patient Safety Through Informed Consent, Honoring Patient Wishes, and Disclosure... 69 Safe Practice 2: Informed Consent... 71 Safe Practice 3: Life-Sustaining Treatment... 74 Safe Practice 4: Disclosure... 77 (continued)

IV NATIONAL QUALITY FORUM Chapter 4 Improving Patient Safety by Matching Healthcare Needs with Service Delivery Capability... 81 Safe Practice 5: Nursing Workforce... 82 Safe Practice 6: Direct Caregivers... 87 Safe Practice 7: Intensive Care Unit Care... 92 Chapter 5 Improving Patient Safety by Facilitating Information Transfer and Clear Communication... 95 Safe Practice 8: Communication of Critical Information... 97 Safe Practice 9: Order Readback... 101 Safe Practice 10: Labeling of Diagnostic Studies... 103 Safe Practice 11: Discharge Systems... 106 Safe Practice 12: Safe Adoption of Computerized Prescriber Order Entry... 112 Safe Practice 13: Abbreviations... 116 Chapter 6 Improving Patient Safety Through Medication Management... 119 Safe Practice 14: Medication Reconciliation... 120 Safe Practice 15: Pharmacist Role... 124 Safe Practice 16: Standardized Medication Labeling and Packaging... 128 Safe Practice 17: High Alert Medications... 131 Safe Practice 18: Unit-Dose Medications... 134 Chapter 7 Improving Patient Safety Through Prevention of Healthcare-Associated Infections... 137 Safe Practice 19: Aspiration and Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia Prevention... 138 Safe Practice 20: Central Venous Catheter-Associated Bloodstream Infection Prevention... 141 Safe Practice 21: Surgical Site Infection Prevention... 143 Safe Practice 22: Hand Hygiene... 147 Safe Practice 23: Influenza Prevention... 149 Chapter 8 Improving Patient Safety Through Condition- and Site-Specific Practices... 153 Safe Practice 24: Evidence-Based Referrals... 154 Safe Practice 25: Wrong Site, Wrong Procedure, Wrong Person Surgery Prevention.. 156 Safe Practice 26: Perioperative Myocardial Infarction/Ischemia Prevention... 159 Safe Practice 27: Pressure Ulcer Prevention... 160 Safe Practice 28: Venous Thromboembolism/Deep Vein Thrombosis Prevention... 164 Safe Practice 29: Anticoagulation Therapy... 166 Safe Practice 30: Contrast Media-Induced Renal Failure Prevention... 168 Appendix A Crosswalk of 2003 Endorsed and 2006 Updated Safe Practices... A-1 Appendix B Members and Board of Directors... B-1 Appendix C Maintenance Committee and Project Staff... C-1 Appendix D Commentary... D-1 Appendix E Selected References... E-1 Appendix F Crosswalk of 2006 Updated Safe Practices with Other NQF-Endorsed Standards... F-1 Appendix G Consensus Development Process: Summary... G-1

V NATIONAL QUALITY FORUM Safe Practices for Better Healthcare 2006 Update Executive Summary In some ways little has changed since the National Quality Forum (NQF) endorsed the original set of 30 Safe Practices for Better Healthcare in 2003. Adverse healthcare events continue as a leading cause of death and injury in the United States, even though well-documented methods continue to be available that could prevent the occurrence of such events. This report updates the original set of NQF-endorsed TM safe practices. It continues 4 endorsed practices without material change, subsumes 3 practices into other practices, adds 3 new practices, and materially updates the remaining 23 practices. As with the original set, these 30 safe practices should be universally utilized in applicable healthcare settings to reduce the risk of harm resulting from processes, systems, and environments of care. This set of safe practices is not intended to capture all activities that might reduce adverse healthcare events. Rather, this report continues the focus on practices that: have strong evidence that they are effective in reducing the likelihood of harming a patient; are generalizable (i.e., they may be applied in multiple clinical care settings and/or for multiple types of patients); are likely to have a significant benefit to patient safety if fully implemented; and have knowledge about them that is usable by consumers, purchasers, providers, and researchers.

VI NATIONAL QUALITY FORUM This report does not represent the entire scope of NQF work pertinent to improving patient safety and healthcare quality. NQF has completed, has updated, and has under way a number of projects of direct or ancillary relevance to this report. Other patient safety products include Serious Reportable Events in Healthcare: A Consensus Report, published in 2002 and updated in 2006, and Standardizing a Patient Safety Taxonomy: A Consensus Report, published in 2005. Additionally, other NQF-endorsed voluntary consensus standards related to settings of care, healthcare conditions, and special concerns around healthcare literacy, language barriers, and minority populations are relevant and are outlined in a crosswalk of the safe practices with other NQF-endorsed consensus standards. Implementation of these practices will improve patient safety. Additionally, other important uses of the set are to help healthcare providers assess the degree to which safe practices already have been implemented in their settings and to assess the degree to which the practices provide tangible evidence of patient safety improvement and increased patient satisfaction and loyalty. And importantly, with this update healthcare organization leaders and governance boards are explicitly called upon to proactively review the safety of their organizations and to take action to continually improve the safety and thus the quality of care they provide. In addition to providing the practices and their specifications, the 2006 report adds elements to assist implementation and the measurement of success in implementation, while at the same time meeting many of the expectations of accrediting and standards-setting organizations. The practices are organized into seven broad categories for improving patient safety by or through: creating and sustaining a culture of safety; informed consent, honoring patient wishes, and disclosure; matching healthcare needs with service delivery capability; information management and continuity of care; medication management; preventing healthcare-associated infections; and condition and site-specific practices. The safe practices are not prioritized or weighted because all are important in improving patient safety. In addition, no objective, evidence-based method of prioritizing the practices could be identified that would equitably apply across the current heterogeneous universe of healthcare facilities that have variably implemented many, and in some cases all, of these practices. For any given healthcare provider, the choice of practices that will have the highest priority will depend on the individual provider s circumstances, including which practices have been implemented, the degree of success the provider has had with implementation, the availability of resources, environmental constraints, and other factors.

SAFE PRACTICES FOR BETTER HEALTHCARE 2006 UPDATE: A CONSENSUS REPORT VII NQF-Endorsed TM Set of Safe Practices* 1. Create and sustain a healthcare culture of safety. Element 1: Leadership structures and systems must be established to ensure that there is organization-wide awareness of patient safety performance gaps, that there is direct accountability of leaders for those gaps, that an adequate investment is made in performance improvement abilities, and that actions are taken to assure the safe care of every patient served. Element 2: Healthcare organizations must measure their culture, provide feedback to the leadership and staff, and undertake interventions that will reduce patient safety risk. Element 3: Healthcare organizations must establish a proactive, systematic, and organization-wide approach to developing team-based care through teamwork training, skill building, and team led performance improvement interventions that reduce preventable harm to patients. Element 4: Healthcare organizations must systematically identify and mitigate patient safety risks and hazards with an integrated approach in order to continuously drive down preventable patient harm. 2. Ask each patient or legal surrogate to teach back in his or her own words key information about the proposed treatments or procedures for which he or she is being asked to provide informed consent. 3. Ensure that written documentation of the patient s preferences for life-sustaining treatments is prominently displayed in his or her chart. 4. Following serious unanticipated outcomes, including those that are clearly caused by systems failures, the patient and, as appropriate, the family should receive timely, transparent, and clear communication concerning what is known about the event. 5. Implement critical components of a well-designed nursing workforce that mutually reinforce patient safeguards, including the following: a nurse staffing plan with evidence that it is adequately resourced and actively managed and that its effectiveness is regularly evaluated with respect to patient safety; senior administrative nursing leaders, such as a chief nursing officer, as part of the hospital senior management team; governance boards and senior administrative leaders that take accountability for reducing patient safety risks related to nurse staffing decisions and the provision of financial resources for nursing services; and the provision of budget resources to support nursing staff in the ongoing acquisition and maintenance of professional knowledge and skills. 6. Ensure that non-nursing, direct care staffing levels are adequate, that the staff is competent, and that they have had adequate orientation, training, and education to perform their assigned direct care duties. 7. All patients in general intensive care units (ICUs) (both adult and pediatric) should be managed by physicians who have specific training and certification in critical care medicine ( critical care certified ). 8. Ensure that care information is transmitted and appropriately documented in a timely manner and in a clearly understandable form to patients and to all of the patient s healthcare providers/ professionals, within and between care settings, who need that information in order to provide continued care. 9. For verbal or telephone orders or for telephonic reporting of critical test results, verify the complete order or test result by having the person who is receiving the information record and read back the complete order or test result. 10. Implement standardized policies, processes, and systems to ensure the accurate labeling of radiographs, laboratory specimens, or other diagnostic studies so that the right study is labeled for the right patient at the right time. 11. A discharge plan must be prepared for each patient at the time of hospital discharge, and a concise discharge summary must be prepared for and relayed to the clinical caregiver accepting responsibility for postdischarge care in a timely manner. Organizations must ensure that there is confirmation of the receipt of the discharge information by the independent licensed practitioner who will assume responsibility for care after discharge. 12. Implement a computerized prescriber order entry (CPOE) system built upon the requisite foundation of re-engineered evidence-based care, an assurance of healthcare organization staff and independent practitioner readiness, and an integrated information technology infrastructure. 13. Standardize a list of do not use abbreviations, acronyms, symbols, and dose designations that cannot be used throughout the organization. 14. The healthcare organization must develop, reconcile, and communicate an accurate medication list throughout the continuum of care. 15. Pharmacists should actively participate in medication management systems by, at a minimum, working with other health professionals to select and maintain a formulary of medications chosen for safety and effectiveness, being available for consultation with prescribers on medication ordering, interpretation and review of medication orders, preparation of medications, assurance of the safe storage and availability of medications, dispensing of medications, and administration and monitoring of medications. (more) * See the report for applicable care settings for each practice, detailed specifications, and additional background, implementation, and reference material.

VIII NATIONAL QUALITY FORUM NQF-Endorsed Set of Safe Practices* (continued) 16. Standardize methods for the labeling and packaging of medications. 17. Identify all high alert drugs, and establish policies and processes to minimize the risks associated with the use of these drugs. At a minimum, such drugs should include intravenous adrenergic agonists and antagonists, chemotherapy agents, anticoagulants and anti-thrombotics, concentrated parenteral electrolytes, general anesthetics, neuromuscular blockers, insulin and oral hypoglycemics, and opiates. 18. Healthcare organizations should dispense medications, including parenterals, in unit-dose, or, when appropriate, in unit-of-use form, whenever possible. 19. Action should be taken to prevent ventilator-associated pneumonia by implementing ventilator bundle intervention practices. 20. Adhere to effective methods of preventing central venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections, and specify the requirements in explicit policies and procedures. 21. Prevent surgical site infections (SSIs) by implementing four components of care: appropriate use of antibiotics; appropriate hair removal; maintenance of postoperative glucose control for patients undergoing major cardiac surgery; and establishment of postoperative normothermia for patients undergoing colorectal surgery. 22. Comply with current Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Hand Hygiene guidelines. 23. Annually, immunize healthcare workers and patients who should be immunized against influenza. 24. For high-risk elective cardiac procedures or other specified care, patients should be clearly informed of the likely reduced risk of an adverse outcome at treatment facilities that participate in clinical outcomes registries and that minimize the number of surgeons performing those procedures with the strongest volume-outcomes relationship. 25. Implement the Universal Protocol for Preventing Wrong Site,Wrong Procedure,Wrong Person Surgery for all invasive procedures. 26. Evaluate each patient undergoing elective surgery for his or her risk of an acute ischemic perioperative cardiac event, and consider prophylactic treatment with beta blockers for patients who either: 1. have required beta blockers to control symptoms of angina or have symptomatic arrhythmias or hypertension, or 2. are at high cardiac risk owing to the finding of ischemia on preoperative testing and are undergoing vascular surgery. 27. 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 this evaluation. 28. Evaluate each patient upon admission, and regularly thereafter, for the risk of developing venous thromboembolism/deep vein thrombosis (VTE/DVT). Utilize clinically appropriate, evidence-based methods of thromboprophylaxis. 29. Every patient on long-term oral anticoagulants should be monitored by a qualified health professional using a careful strategy to ensure the appropriate intensity of supervision. 30. Utilize validated protocols to evaluate patients who are at risk for contrast media-induced renal failure, and utilize a clinically appropriate method for reducing the risk of renal injury based on the patient s kidney function evaluation. * See the report for applicable care settings for each practice, detailed specifications, and additional background, implementation, and reference material.