Room of Horrors : Engaging Interprofessional Students in a Hazards of Hospitalization Simulation. Margie Molloy, DNP, RN, CNE, CHSE Alison Clay, MD

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Transcription:

Room of Horrors : Engaging Interprofessional Students in a Hazards of Hospitalization Simulation Margie Molloy, DNP, RN, CNE, CHSE Alison Clay, MD

ANCC Continuing Nursing Education International Nursing Association for Clinical Simulation & Learning is accredited as a provider of continuing nursing education by the American Nurses Credentialing Center s Commission on Accreditation.

DISCLOSURES Conflict of Interest Margie Molloy & Alison Clay report no conflict of interest Julia Greenawalt (INACSL Conference Administrator & Nurse Planner) reports no conflict of interest Leann Horsley (INACSL Lead Nurse Planner) reports no conflict of interest Successful Completion Attend 100% of session Complete online evaluation

Learning Objectives Upon completion of this educational activity, participants will be able to: 1. Identify the importance of and strategies for incorporating Interprofessional education in healthcare training. 2. Verbalize how a patient safety simulation experience can be used to teach medical and nursing students about the hazards of hospitalization. 3. Identify the benefits of caring for patients as a team versus caring for patients as individuals.

Background Hazards of hospitalization (HOH) are costly Hospital acquired infections (HAI), medication errors, pressure ulcers, and falls prolong hospitalizations, cause suffering and may result in death Medical and nursing students may not even be aware of HOHs

Implications for Educators IPE needs to be part of students training Students must be aware that HOH exist Students have a role in preventing/mitigating these HOH

JCAHO and Safety/HAC Falls Restraints High Alert Medications Other HAI Surgical Site Infection Ventilator Associated Events Central line associated blood stream infection Catheter associated urinary tract infections

Importance: Costs Associated with HAI CLABSI 1 Mortality Adjusted OR 2.27 (CI 1.14-4.46) Excess Total Cost Attributable Cost $50,000 $32,000 VAP 2,3,4 HR 1.25 (CI 0.7-2.24) 3 OR 2.0 (1.16-3.56) 4 $50,000 2 $12,000 2 NB: CAUTI most common HAI cause 2 o BSI, and are therefore are costly 5

Importance of HAI: Reduced Reimbursement Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) Affordable Care Act 1. Final Rule 2009: 2% penalty for not reporting data 2. 2011: Nonpayment for provider preventable events 3. Value Based Purchasing 2013: payment based on hospital performance against national standards 4. HAC program 2015: Reduced annual payments based on rates of Hospital Acquired Conditions http://www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-fee-for-service-payment/hospitalacqcond/hospital-acquired_conditions.html (accessed 2-28-2015)

CAUTI Prevention Don t use it unless necessary Only qualified people should put it in! Use a closed catheter system with Distal ports for aspiration Keep connected and draining (below level bladder) Take it out as soon as possible CID 2010;50:625-663

VAP (VAC?)- Prevention Feeding Analgesic Sedation (SAT) Thrombophylaxis (DVT) HOB elevated 30 Ulcer Prophylaxis Glucose control (<180) (Early mobility) http://www.charityfocus.org/blog/upload/image/helpothers/2010/hugs%20cartoon.jpg (accessed 2-27-2015) CCM 2005; 33: 1225-1229

CLABSI Prevention Insertion Maintenance Removal Hand Hygiene* CHG Scrub* Full Barrier Precautions* Site Selection (Subclavian or IJ with US)* Catheter Fewest Lumens CHG Dressing Checklist at Insertion CVC Cart Hand Hygiene Scrub the Hub >30 seconds Add Sterile Caps Change caps >72 hrs Check Dressing/Line for signs of infection Replace Tubing >96 hours <7 days or after blood/lipids No Routine Line Changes http://www.jointcommission.org/topics/clabsi_toolkit.aspx (accessed 2-28-2015) Assess Need for Line Every day!* * Part of Original Central Line bundle

Team Skills in Health Care Shared Mental Model Situation Monitoring/Cross Monitoring Structured Communication

TeamSTEPPS Patient Part of Team Leadership Communication Situation Monitoring Mutual Support

Room of Horrors Simulation 2 Part Patient Safety Simulation: Part 1: Individual Walk-through- list HOH observed in the simulation Part 2: Team Walk-through- list HOH observed in the simulation Utilizes the Room of Horrors- I Spy Simulation Game

Part 1 ROH Student walks through room independently Records patient safety hazards (clipboard) Transfer findings into a database Participants: School of Nursing n= 77 ABSN Students + 17 ACNP Student School of Medicine n= 95

Part 2 ROH Student walks through room as a team (team comprised of a mix of nursing and medical students) Record patient safety hazards (clipboard) Group transfers findings into a database Total Teams Participating: School of Nursing + School of Medicine Teams n=54

Methods Mixed Methods Observational Study with a qualitative and quantitative component: Part 1: Identifies if nursing and medical students identify the same type of HOH Part 2: Identifies if teams are better at identifying HOH compared to individuals

Nursing students: Results: Part 1 more likely to describe that there were no orders for some therapies (i.e. medications, restraints) more likely to notice problems with emergency equipment Medical students: more likely to notice reasons that certain therapies should not be given (i.e. patient was allergic to medication, restraints would make delirium worse and should not be ordered)

Room of Horrors- Infection Control 80.0 70.0 60.0 50.0 40.0 30.0 Nursing Medicine 20.0 10.0 0.0 No Gowns/Gloves Empy Hand Sanitizer Shouldn't use Hand sanitizer All Statistically Significant

Room of Horror: Other HAC 100.0 90.0 80.0 70.0 60.0 50.0 40.0 Nursing Medicine 30.0 20.0 10.0 0.0 Soiled Bedding IV site red HOB not correct* No DVT

Results: Part 2 Teams performed better than individuals at identifying HOH. Identification of ICU-related HOH were overall quite low, especially for prevention of: Pressure Ulcers and Stress Ulcers Ventilator-associated Pneumonia and Delirium There was a learning effect between simulations

Part 2 Survey Results

Recommendations Because graduating nursing and medical students are not able to identify many hazards of hospitalization, the health system should incorporate HOH as part of orientation and offer this learning as an interprofessional team experience

Limitations Single institution study involving only 2 groups of professional students ROH Part 2 was not randomized to detect the learning effect from ROH Part 1 A tool for documenting faculty observations during ROH Part 2 needs to better capture students teamwork interactions

Conclusions SON/SOM Faculty collaborated and implemented the ROH simulations for graduating nursing and medical students. The simulation exposed students to the similarities and differences in each other s roles and responsibilities in patient care. Allowed students to engage in dialogue about HOH. Overall, the students identified the simulation experience to be engaging and informative as a safety initiative and suggest repeating it for future cohorts.

What s one thing you learned? There are a lot of things you must remember to assess.almost too many to remember The devil is in the details. The horror is real

Special thanks to the IPE Team Alison Clay, MD Saumil M. Chudgar, MD, MS Kathleen M. Turner, DNP, RN Jacqueline Vaughn, BSN, RN, CHSE Thanks for your participation! Questions? Margie Molloy email margory.molloy@duke.edu

References Farnan, J. M., Gaffney, S., Poston, J. T., Slawinski, K., Cappaert, M., Kamin, B., Arora, V. M. (2015). Patient safety room of horrors: a novel method to assess medical students and entering residents' ability to identify hazards of hospitalisation. BMJ Qual Saf. epublication. (doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2015-004621) HCPro. (2009). HCTW news brief: Room of horrors helps patient safety training. Staff Development Weekly: Insight on Evidence-Based Practice in Education, September 25, 2009. Retrieved July 17, 2015, from http://www.hcpro.com/nrs-239184-975/hctw-newsbrief-room-of-horrors-helps-patient-safety-training.html. Levinson, D. R. (2010). Adverse events in hospitals: national incidence among medicare beneficiaries. Retrieved November 1, 2015, from oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-06-09-00090.pdf. Lipitz-Snyderman, A., Steinwachs, D., Needham, D. M., Colantuoni, E., Morlock, L. L., & Pronovost, P. J. (2011). Impact of a statewide intensive care unit quality improvement initiative on hospital mortality and length of stay: retrospective comparative analysis. BMJ, 342, d219. (doi: 10.1136/bmj.d219) Miller, B. (2014). 'Room of Horrors' event stresses patient safety awareness at ACH. Retrieved July 20, 2014, from http://www.auburnhospital.org/news-events/articles/national-patient-safety-awareness-week-at-ach. Molnar, B. (2013). College of Nursing gives students 'spooky' assignment to stress patient safety. Retrieved July 19, 2015, from http://news.psu.edu/story/293127/2013/10/29/academics/college-nursing-gives-students-spooky-assignment-stress-patient. Rehabilitation Therapy Student Society. (2012). 3rd Annual Room of Horrors - Interprofessional Student event at QJBC. Retrieved July 20, 2015, from http://www.rehabsociety.ca/news-2011-2012/october-01st-2012. Rosenfield, D., Oandasan, I., & Reeves, S. (2011). Perceptions versus reality: a qualitative study of students' expectations and experiences of interprofessional education. Med Educ, 45, 471-477. (doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.2010.03883.x) Shekhter, I., Rosen, L., Sanko, J., Everett-Thomas, R., Fitzpatrick, M., & Birnbach, D. (2012). A patient safety course for preclinical medical students. Clin Teach, 9, 376-381. (doi: 10.1111/j.1743-498X.2012.00592.x) Stevenson, E., Chudgar, S. M., Turner, K., Molloy, M., Phillips, B., Engle, D. L., Clay, A. S. (2015). How We Engage Graduating Professional Students in Interprofessional Patient Safety. Nurs Forum. epublication. (doi: 10.1111/nuf.12146) Strategies for Nurse Managers.com. (2015). Sight gags abound in patient safety "room of horrors". Retrieved July 20, 2015, from http://www.strategiesfornursemanagers.com/ce_detail/232926.cfm.