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Marlyn Conti, BSN, MM, CPHQ Patient Safety Initiatives Manager
Intermountain Healthcare Quality and Patient SafetyJason Scott, MPH, MPP
Carlos Barbagelata, MS
Outline for Discussion• Review of data through Q2 2014• ‘High performers’ – Identify and ask what they are doing?• Falls recommended metrics• “Just-one-thing” – updated document• 2014/15 plans • Reach out to low performers to provide assistance• Continue Webinars for sharing?• 2015?
Overall Progress Through Q1 2014
Overall Progress Through Q2 2014
Intermountain HEN 2012- Q2 2014 submitting Inpatient Falls with Injury
High Performing Benchmark: 0.50
Intermountain HEN 2012- Q1 2014 submitting Inpatient Falls with Injury
Intermountain HEN 2012-Q1 2014 submitting Hospitals Inpatient Falls
High Performing Benchmark: 2.15
Intermountain HEN 2012-13 submitting Hospitals Inpatient Falls
High Performing Hospital Highlight… Most Improvement
Inpatient Falls
Most Improvement
BAYLOR ALL SAINTS MEDICAL CENTER AT FW
HEBER VALLEY MEDICAL CENTER
DELTA COMMUNITY MEDICAL CENTER
AMERICAN FORK HOSPITALBAYLOR REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER AT GRAPEVINE
SUTTER COAST HOSPITAL
CASSIA REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER
EDEN MEDICAL CENTER
ESPANOLA HOSPITALPROVIDENCE HOOD RIVER MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Lowest Rates
BAYLOR ALL SAINTS MEDICAL CENTER AT FW
MENLO PARK SURGICAL HOSPITAL
OREM COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
HEBER VALLEY MEDICAL CENTER
DELTA COMMUNITY MEDICAL CENTER
GARFIELD MEMORIAL HOSPITALBAYLOR REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER AT GRAPEVINESUTTER MATERNITY & SURGERY CENTER OF SANTA CRUZ
AMERICAN FORK HOSPITAL
BAYLOR MEDICAL CENTER AT WAXAHACHIE
High Performing Hospital Highlight… Most Improvement
Inpatient Falls with Injury
Most Improvement
BAYLOR HEART AND VASCULAR HOSPITAL
BAYLOR ALL SAINTS MEDICAL CENTER AT FW
DELTA COMMUNITY MEDICAL CENTER
AMERICAN FORK HOSPITAL
PROVIDENCE NEWBERG MEDICAL CENTER
PROVIDENCE MEDFORD MEDICAL CENTER
SUTTER COAST HOSPITAL
UPPER CONNECTICUT VALLEY HOSPITAL
SUTTER SOLANO MEDICAL CENTER
SUTTER DAVIS HOSPITAL
Lowest Rates
BAYLOR ALL SAINTS MEDICAL CENTER AT FW
BAYLOR REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER AT GRAPEVINE
THE HEART HOSPITAL BAYLOR PLANO
PROVIDENCE MEDFORD MEDICAL CENTER
BAYLOR MEDICAL CENTER AT CARROLLTON
SUTTER SOLANO MEDICAL CENTER
BAYLOR MEDICAL CENTER AT WAXAHACHIE
SUTTER DAVIS HOSPITALSUTTER MATERNITY & SURGERY CENTER OF SANTA CRUZ
AMERICAN FORK HOSPITAL
Just One Thing MatrixRecommendations
Getting Started Working Harder Ahead of the Curve
Implement standard Assessment tools, protocols and prevention strategies
(high level of evidence)
Appoint “leads” to drive improvement & identify or champion teams that includes unit level nursing, quality, patient safety, physical therapy and pharmacy services. (high level of evidence)
Implement decision algorithms and/or computerized decision support in the electronic medical record to target interventions based on patient specific risk factors
• Assessment & Reassessment• Standard risk assessment tool (standardized across all care
settings)• Policy for timing of assessment• Reassess when condition changes and after procedures
Falls Bundle• Interventions• Signage
• Door frame magnet/Door signs• Patient/Family Education
• Standard FAQ sheet• Room environment
• Bed low, room free of clutter, side rails up, bed alarms on• Visibility
• Made reminders larger and brighter (yellow blankets, slippers, etc)• Fall prevention protocol recorded in medical record• Hourly rounding made part of falls protocol• Safe Patient Handling (no lift) policy
Falls Bundle• Patient Family Education• Standardized education content• Available as applicable just-in-time), online, etc• Validation that learning has occurred such as a teach-back concept
or skills pass-off.• Staff Education & Learning• Standardized education contend on hire• Annual skills fairs• Annual assigned learning modules
• Leadership/Structure• Fall prevention team• Integration with quality and patient safety plan and structure• Unit level & hospital level Fall Prevention champions• Post fall huddles and fall evaluation/questionnaire
Falls Bundle• Equipment• Beds
• Standard models where possible, reduces learning needs and maintenance issues
• Bed Alarms• Integrated with nurse call systems when possible
• Lifting Equipment• Available and in use (portable, overhead, and transfer such as gait
belts, slider sheets/boards, etc.)• Nurse Call System
• Integrated with beds and/or communication devices• Environmental Safety
• Electrical outlets, lips on doorways
Falls Survey Results
1. What facility are you from?
17 Facilities Responding
Baylor Baylor Scott & White Hillcrest Medical Center - Waco TexasDr. Dan C. Trigg Memorial HospitalIntermountain Medical CenterIntermountain SWRMayo Clinic Health System - Franciscan HealthcareMayo Clinic Health System - NorthlandMcKay DeePresbyterian Ph-Main campus Primary Children's HospitalProvidence St. VIncent Medical CenterRegions Hospital, St. Paul, MinnesotaRivertonSanpete Valley HospitalSutter Medical Center Santa Rosa, CaUpper Connecticut Valley HospitalVVMC
Other (specify)Teaching by RN's and staffVerbal teaching regarding falls risk and interventionsVerbal EducationTeaching sheetsHandout and verbal communicationWhiteboards reminders, DiscussionFace-to-face discussionCommunication board, unit orientation, roundingIn-room white boards
9. What tools do you use to educate staff about fall prevention? (check all that apply)
OtherAnnual fall prevention workshop and online trainingStaff meetingsUnit Based Falls ChampionShared Decision MakingStaff meeting, post fall assessments, and review of casesOrientation checklistsPost falls huddle, annual skills dayHuddles, staff meetings, Metric Boards1:1, unit fall champions, newsletter articles
10. With what frequency do you assign staff education? (Check all that apply).
Answer Response %Annual 23 88%As-Needed 16 62%On Hire 11 42%Other (Specify) 3 12%Every Other Year 0 0%
11. Do you provide patient fall incidentevent reports for use by hospital staff managers and teams? (If yes, please describe how reports are distributed or made available).
Answer Response %Yes 23 88%No 3 12%Total 26 100%
11. Do you provide patient fall incident event reports for use by hospital staff managers and teams? (If yes, please describe how reports are distributed or made available).
OtherVia email to unit managers and designated staff leadersAvailable via reporting systemStaff meetings, Electronic Event SystemInformation is discussed at meetings with leaders and at staff meetings. Patient information and outcomes are shared but never posted. Data about falls is posted in the nursing unitsReports are viewed and managed at a local level of the location of the fall. Falls Prevention team analyzes the data from the reports to identify house-wide trends.Event reports are filled out online and can be accessed by managers and quality improvement staff. Post-fall assessment are filled out and scanned to management, and falls committee representativeFall with injury reports are sent to unit managers post-fall debrief. Statistic reports are available via STATIT and a monthly report is shared to nursing managers at the monthly fall team meeting.Data from risk, collected by Quality, shared with staff, managers, leadership, governing board, and medical staff.Shared with managers who, in turn, educate and follow up with staff. Stats are shared with managers and staff.Fall reports for hospital and per units with monthly rate and rolling 6 month rate, also have fall prevention bundle audit data
12. What is the most successful approach that you feel has contributed to reducing patient falls?
Text ResponseGetting staff involved in assessing their own unit readiness to prevent falls. Making it a goal with incentives for completion. Telling stories about falls and near misses. Integrating fall prevention with safe patient handling.The visuals applied: This helps all staff identify which patients are high risk falls.(i.e) Gait belts hanging on door frame, red booties on falls risk patients,bedside reporting also helps remind patient and family members. Proper equipment, staff training, frequent reminder of importance, keeping it in the forefront at all timesChange in culture - falls are not expected or a natual part of being hospitalized. Constant vigilance; staff accountability; manager engagement; unit-based champions; current data - metrics;Falls prevalence monthly, multildisciplinary approach and the increase in lift equipment and the use of a lift team. Staff awareness, daily huddle focus, and educationRoot Cause and Common Cause Analysis with Direct Feedback to Staff, Units, Ministries. Assessment tools that identify high risk patients, bed alarms, chair alarms, pt's are designated as a falls risk on patient census board, and fall magnets are placed outside doors. If a fall occurs we do post fall assessment and identify any contributing factors and or trends. Partnering with family/caregivers to team up to prevent falls.Making our team multidisciplinary, Fall contracts and hourly rounding addressing the 4 PsBed alarms connected to call system. awareness when falls occur what the reasons were reported to quality and patient safety committee. clinical ladder RN project for 2014Currently piloting. No One Walks Alone program. We got our infromation from Kaiser San Diego. Pilot has just begun but has provided data that it may have a profound impact on our overall fall rate. Repeat falls reduced by standardizing the interventions once a patient fell and the use of alarms to prevent fallsRequired monthly audits done by each unit to ensure our falls prevention strategies are in place - magnets, stickers, gait belts, bed alarms, white boards, risk scores etc.
13. To help us measure progress, please indicate your facility's program status since starting the HEN collaboration to reduce patient falls.
A. "Getting Started": This level consists of implementing standard assessment tools, protocols and prevention strategies.
B. "Working Harder": This level focuses on appointing "leads" to drive improvement and identify SWOT (or champion) teams that includes unit nurse.
C. "Ahead of the Curve": This level focuses on implementing decision algorithms and/or computerized decision support in the EMR based on patient risk factors.
What level do you feel your facility is at?Answer Response %Getting Started 6 24%Working Harder 10 40%Ahead of the Curve 9 36%Total 25 100%
14. What barriers are you experiencing that are preventing you fromachieving your goals to reduce patient falls?
Fall Prevention BarriersEnough bandwidth to keep up the focus. Time, consensus, conflicting priorities.Staff shortages. Patient acuity and volume. Buy in from unit managers and their staffHigh falls risk patients inability to remember they can not ambulate on there own."Patients cognitive level"Equipment issues, Many changes in workflow. Accountability issues.Multiple competing priorities that seem to switch the focus away from fall prevention; increasing Nurse Patient Ratios; staff turnover;Consistency in standard implementation -- variability amoung staff performance. Dementia patients who can not find SNF placement related to behavior--longer stays increase riskStaff engagement with the process. Hospital does not bed alarms on every bed and alarms are not routed to the nurse call system. Staff perception with nursing ratios increasing is the hardest thing.There are certain things that are outside of our control no matter how hard we work and no matter what interventions we put into place! It's very frustrating..Have been able to work through barriers. Zero falls with moderate or severe injury in 698 days (since we began monitoring in Nov 2012.100% of staff staying in bathroom with patient and not "turning to get something outside of the bathroom"Consistently remembering bed alarmsIn children, falls don't usually cause expensive harm or injury as in adults, so leadership often overlooks the importance of fall prevention as a proactive process.
Final Thoughts
• 1. What changes have you made since joining the HEN to reduce falls?
• 2. What have you done to recognize achievements in fall reduction?