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The Need For Continuous Electronic Monitoring Physician-Patient Alliance for Health & Safety University of Notre Dame (February 21, 2012)
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Final ppahs notre dame presentation

Jun 26, 2015

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Health & Medicine

Mike Wong

Presentation to class at University of Notre Dame who are creating website and materials in honor of Amanda Abbiehl. Amanda died of a PCA-related incident and would have been attending college if she was alive.
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Page 1: Final ppahs notre dame presentation

The Need For Continuous Electronic

MonitoringPhysician-Patient Alliance

for Health & SafetyUniversity of Notre Dame

(February 21, 2012)

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Agenda

• How Often Do PCA Errors Occur?

• Faces of Tragedy

• PPAHS Safety Checklist Initiative

• Veteran Affairs Example

• The Goal: Continuous Electronic Monitoring for All Patients

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How Often Do PCA Errors Occur?

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reported PCA Errors:Just The Tip of the Iceberg

“PCA errors certainly occur, both in programming and in delivery, but any published estimate is likely to be only the tip of the iceberg.”

Dr Richard Dutton(Executive Director, Anesthesia Quality Institute)

Anesthesia Quality Institute’s mission:• develop and maintain an ongoing registry of

anesthesia cases and outcomes to help anesthesiologists assess and improve patient care

• goal include data from all practicing anesthesiologists and all practice locations in the United States.

http://ppahs.wordpress.com/2011/11/30/errors-with-patient-controlled-analgesia-pca-just-the-tip-of-the-iceberg/

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MEDMARXReported PCA Errors

Rodney W. Hicks; Vanja Sikirica; Winnie Nelson; Jeff R. Schein; Diane D. Cousins, “Medication Errors Involving Patient-controlled Analgesia” American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy. 2008; 65(5):429-440.

What is MEDMARX? largest nongovernmental, Internet-accessible database of medication errors in U.S.

How many errors were reported? 919,241 reported errors(5yr period: July 1, 2000, to June 30, 2005)

How many were PCA errors? 1% (or 9,571) associated with PCA

Limitations of MEDMARX reported errors MedMarx only a voluntary reporting system(i.e. 801 healthcare facilities reporting)

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Voluntary toAll Reports

“The general rule of thumb is that for every

reported event, there can be between 300-1,000 unreported events.”

Professor Rodney Hicks(then Manager, Patient Safety Research

and Practice, United States Pharmacopeia - now Professor, Western

University College of Graduate Nursing, Pomona, California)

http://ppahs.wordpress.com/2011/10/31/how-often-do-errors-with-pca-occur/

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Voluntary toAll Reports (5 years)

9,571voluntary reports = between 2.8 million and

9.6 million total events (5yrs)

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Voluntary toAll Reports (yearly)

about 600,000 to 2 million events per year

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Faces of Tragedy

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PPAHS Patient Stories

Justin Micalizzi

Louise Batz

Leah Katherine Coufal

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In Amanda’s Memory, Always Monitor

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PPAHSSafety Checklist Initiative

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IV Line Infections: Concept

Dr. Peter Pronovost

(critical care specialist, Johns Hopkins)

Checklist:

1. Wash hands with soap.

2. Clean the patient’s skin with chlorhexidine antiseptic

3. Cover the patient’s entire body with sterile drapes

4. Wear a mask, hat, sterile gown and gloves.

5. Put a sterile dressing over the insertion site after the line was in

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IV Line Infections: Results

• prevented 43 infections

• avoided 8 I.C.U. deaths

• saved hospital approximately $2 million

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/24/books/24book.html?pagewanted=all

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Surgical Checklist

New England Journal of Medicine*• Deaths - 1.5% to 0.8%

(about 50% decline)• Complications - 11.0% to 7.0%

(more than 40% reduction)

* Haynes et al, “A Surgical Safety Checklist to Reduce Morbidity and Mortality in a Global Population” N Engl J Med 2009; 360:491-499

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PCA Safety Checklist

Dr. Elliot Krane(Director, Pediatric Pain Management, Lucile

Packard Children’s Hospital at Stanford)A checklist would help avoid many

things that could go wrong with PCA.

Dr. Julius Cuong PhamDepartment of Emergency Medicine, Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care Medicine, Armstrong

Institute for Patient Safety and Quality at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine:

In practice, checklists serve as a mental reminder of critical steps that we may or may not remember. Therefore, the value

of a checklist with regards to PCAs would be to remind us/double check a

critical step in the process.

Dr. Richard Dutton(Executive Director, Anesthesia Quality Institute)

A checklist would help to avoid simple but recurrent errors in

packaging and programming the PCA.

Dr. Andrew Kofke(Co-Director, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania

Neurocritical Care Program)The use of a well-constructed checklist

that ensures proper procedures are followed in patient-controlled analgesia

would enhance patient safety.

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Veteran Affairs Example

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The VHA Problem:High PCA Error Rate

VHA Root Cause Analyses (since 1999)•13% involved two types of pumps•about 50% general-purpose and 50% PCA

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The VHA Problem:High PCA Error Rate

Bryanne Patailbiomedical engineer

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs National Center for Patient Safety

“... there are about 10 times as many general-purpose pumps in use across the VA system than PCA pumps. This suggests that incidents with PCA pumps are about 10 times more than with general-purpose pumps. That’s significant!”

http://www.beckersasc.com/asc-accreditation-and-patient-safety/reducing-errors-with-patient-controlled-analgesia-pumps-qaa-with-bryanne-patail-of-

the-national-center-for-patient-safety.html

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The VHA Solution:Implement Strong Fixes

Bryanne Patailbiomedical engineer, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs,

National Center for Patient Safetyhttp://wp.me/p1JikT-dH

“The strongest fix for PCA pumps is a forcing function, such as an integrated end tidal CO2 monitor that will pause the pump if a possible over infusion occurred. So, healthcare providers should first look at these strong fixes. There they will see the most impact on reducing errors and improving patient safety.”

Three-Types of Fixes“Use of PCA pumps is a process, and improving that process is an area that involves many stakeholders. In looking at fixes, they can be categorized as strong, intermediate or weak fixes.”

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The VHA Solution:Reducing PCA Errors by more than 60%

“A capnograph measures in real-time the adequacy of ventilation. Using this technology could prevent more than 60 percent of adverse events related to PCA pumps.”

Bryanne Patailbiomedical engineer

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs National Center for Patient Safety

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St Joseph’s Hospital & Candler Hospital

What Happened 3 significant patient events in less than 2 year period

What They Didin 2002

replaced its existing traditional IV pumps with “smart” IV safety systems - PCA pump with integrated capnography

Location Savannah, Georgia

History 2 of oldest continuously operating hospitals in US

Patient Volume 39,064 admissions annually

Staff- 407 physicians- 716 nurses- 50 pharmacists

Ray Maddox & Carolyn Williams, “Clinical Experience with Capnography Monitoring for PCA Patients”, APSF Newsletter (Winter 2012)

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Return on Investment*

St Joseph’s Hospital & Candler Hospital• no PCA-related respiratory events with a serious outcome

- now approaching their 8th ‘event free’ year

• averted at least 471 preventable adverse drug events

• prevented estimated potential expenses of almost $4 million

• 5 year ROI of $2.5 million

✴ “There can be no adequate valuation of a life saved from preventing an adverse medication event.” - Ray Maddox & Carolyn Williams, “Clinical Experience with Capnography Monitoring for PCA Patients”, APSF Newsletter (Winter 2012)

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The Goal:Continuous Electronic

Monitoringfor All Patients

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We Already have the Technology & Know-How

Careful use of the knowledge and technology we have now can do much to help realize the vision that ‘No Patient Shall Be Harmed By Opioid-Induced Respiratory Depression’.

Ray Maddox & Carolyn WilliamsSt. Joseph's/Candler Health System, Inc

“Clinical Experience with Capnography Monitoring for PCA Patients”APSF Newsletter (Winter 2012)

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In Amanda’s Memory, Always Monitor