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S L I D E 1 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH
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S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 1

You are Yale-New Haven:Safety, Errors and You

Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH

Page 2: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 2

Outline

• Scope of the problem– Macro level– Micro level

• Yale-New Haven data• When errors occur

– Disclosure and reporting– Root cause analysis– Swiss Cheese model

• Corrective actions– Pronovost & Semmelweis– Special Guest

Page 3: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 3

Scope of Problem

• To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System (IOM, 1999).– 44,000-98,000 people die each year from preventable

medical errors.• 71,000 deaths from Diabetes (2007 CDC)• 74,000 deaths from Alzheimer’s (2007 CDC)• 35,000 deaths from Septicemia (2007 CDC)

• If included on death certificates, medical errors would rank in top 10, as high as sixth.

Page 4: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 4

Page 5: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 5

Scope of Problem

• Err– Medical Errors costs in US: $17 - $29Billion / year– Workplace deaths: 6000/year. Medication error deaths:

7,000/year– More people die from Medical Errors than:

• Breast Cancer (41,000) (2007 CDC)• Emphysema (13,000) (2007 CDC)• Kidney Diseases (46,000) (2007 CDC)• Homicide, Birth Defects, Asthma, Cervical Cancer, HIV

COMBINED (approx. 46,000 total)

Page 6: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 6

Page 7: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 7

Scope of Problem

• 2007: Wrong side brain surgery – three times.– Brown

• 2003: Heart/Lung transplant, incompatible blood types (Donor A, Recipient O).– Duke

• 2006: Patient paralyzed but not anesthetized for exploratory laparotomy. Alert and oriented for first 16 minutes of surgery.– Patient committed suicide two weeks later

Page 8: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 8

Gossypiboma

• Retained sponge/towel following surgery

• Yes, it has an actual, formal name

• And an ICD-9 code (998.4)

Page 9: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 9

Outline

• Scope of the problem– Macro level– Micro level

• Yale-New Haven data• When errors occur

– Disclosure and reporting– Root cause analysis– Swiss Cheese model

• Corrective actions– Pronovost & Semmelweis– Special Guest

Page 10: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 10

But, I am Yale-New Haven

US Department of Health and Human Services, http://www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov/. Accessed Jan 12, 2012.

Page 11: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 11

Yale-New Haven Errors

• 6 year old patient here for elective hernia repair.– Wrong side surgery

• LP performed, samples not labeled. – Need to repeat procedure

• Wrong side chest tube.• Wrong side thoracentesis.• Retained surgical sponge/instruments.

– 3-4 times annually.

Page 12: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 12

Outline

• Scope of the problem– Macro level– Micro level

• Yale-New Haven data• When errors occur

– Disclosure and reporting– Root cause analysis– Swiss Cheese model

• Corrective actions– Pronovost & Semmelweis– Special Guest

Page 13: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 13

When Errors Occur

• Foolish, arrogant and dangerous to believe you will never commit an error.

• You have an ethical and professional DUTY to recognize the error.– Personal improvement– Prevention of repeating error– Others can learn

• Disclose, Disclose, Disclose.– Mandated by Joint Commission.– AMA guidelines.– Endorsed by Legal and Risk Services here at YNHH

• 688-2291

Page 14: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 14

• Rosner et al (Arch Int Med, 2000)• “Medical errors occur and are sometimes unavoidable.

Physicians generally, but not always, have ethical and moral obligations to disclose their errors to the patient. Because common medical errors can be expected, physicians are obligated to work within health systems toward reducing systems flaws that promote errors. However, the obligations of physicians to disclose errors made by others are less clear.”

Page 15: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 15

Root Cause Analysis

• Structured investigation into events.• Goal is to define the origin of the event.• No single methodology.

– Multiple viewpoints (interdisciplinary)– Thorough– Repeated– Establish a sequence of events

Page 16: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 16

Making a Diagnosis

• Very similar process to a RCA• Patient with a fever• Dx: Fever

– What causes fever?• IL-1

– Innate Immune System stimulation• Infection• Leukemia/lymphoma• Clot

• Exposure• Drugs

– More background needed.• History, physical, laboratory assessment, radiographic

assessment

Page 17: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 17

Making a Diagnosis

• PEX:– Palpable nodes.

• History: – 30lbs weight loss, unintentional

• Dx: Cancer– Is there more than one cancer?

• Lymph node biopsy– Hodgkin’s lymphoma

Page 18: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 18

RCA

• Starts with event– Patient fall on 10-7.

• What immediately preceded the fall?– Pt out of bed, unknown to floor staff.

• Should patient have been out of bed?– Was on fall precautions, ruby slippers and bed alarm.

• Were these measures active?– Pt wearing ruby slippers. Fall precautions active. Bed alarm

off.• Why was bed alarm off?

– Pt had procedure. Medical staff deactivated bed alarm for procedure and did not reactivate.

Page 19: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 19

Timeline

• Patient fall.– Procedure performed, requiring deactivation of bed alarm. – Bed alarm not reactivated.– Patient attempted to ambulate.– Fall.

• Corrective action.– Educate on bed alarm use.

Page 20: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 20

Swiss Cheese Model

• James Reason, 1990

Image: Duke University, DCFM.

Page 21: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 21

Types of Errors

• Ineffective Hand offs– Signout, ED to floor, OR to PACU

• Latent Errors– “That’s just asking for a problem”

• Heparin in different concentrations, nearly identical vials

• Active Errors– Incorrectly applying ECG leads

• Knowledge Errors– Not recognizing or acting on data

Page 22: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 22

Location of Error

• Healthcare specific– Blunt end vs Sharp end.

• Blunt end:– All the support and ancillary services that surround the

patient-provider interaction• Pharmacy, Shipping and Receiving, the power company, device

manufacturers, pharma.

• Sharp end:– Refers to sharp end of the scalpel

• MDs, LIPs, technicians, nursing, PT, OT, RT.

Page 23: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 23

Outline

• Scope of the problem– Macro level– Micro level

• Yale-New Haven data• When errors occur

– Disclosure and reporting– Root cause analysis– Swiss Cheese model

• Corrective actions– Pronovost & Semmelweis– Special Guest

Page 24: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 24

Systems Engineering

• Did you ever wonder why the Oxygen, Medical Air and Vacuum wall adapters are different shapes?– Adverse event. Ventilator connected to nitrous rather than

oxygen in an OR via wall adapter. – Now that the adapters are, different shapes, it is impossible

to put a green oxygen tree into a non-oxygen wall adapter.

Page 25: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 25

Peter Pronovost

• CVC checklist– 18 month period in Michigan

• Saved $100 million• Saved 1500 Lives• N. Engl. J. Med. 355 (26): 2725–32

Page 26: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 26

CVC checklist

• Doctors should:– Wash their hands with soap.– Clean the patient’s skin with chlorhexidine antiseptic.– Put sterile drapes over the entire patient.– Wear a sterile mask, hat, gown and gloves.– Put a sterile dressing over the catheter site.

Page 27: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 27

Peter Pronovost

• “The fundamental problem with the quality of American medicine is that we’ve failed to view delivery of health care as a science. The tasks of medical science fall into three buckets. One is understanding disease biology. One is finding effective therapies. And one is ensuring those therapies are delivered effectively. That third bucket has been almost totally ignored by research funders, government, and academia. It’s viewed as the art of medicine. That’s a mistake, a huge mistake. And from a taxpayer’s perspective it’s outrageous.”

Page 28: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 28

Ignaz Semmelweis

• Father of clean hands.• “Savior of Mothers.”

– Reduced mortality from 10-30% to 1%.– Only intervention: Washing of hands.– Died from sepsis at age 47.

Page 29: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 29

Are you the next Semmelweis or Pronovost?

• Patient errors and near misses happen at every hospital in the world. Yale is no different.

• We are presented with an opportunity to make Yale-New Haven Hospital and the Yale School of Medicine a beacon for patient safety.– Magnet Status– EMR– Safe patient flow

• Medical errors are an opportunity to improve.• Seize the opportunity.

Page 30: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 30

Look, if you had one shot, or one opportunityTo seize everything you ever wanted in one moment

Would you capture it or just let it slip?

Marshall Bruce Mathers III

Page 31: S L I D E 0 You are Yale-New Haven: Safety, Errors and You Robert L Fogerty, MD, MPH.

S L I D E 31

Your mission, should you choose to accept it…

• Actually, it is not a choice.• Your assignment:

– Follow you teams patients closely. Any unexpected death, bad outcome, readmission, identified error – record the name and MR number.

– Patient must be in Epic and the details of the event must also be in Epic

– Bring this case to a session at the end of the clerkship for a real time Morbidity and Mortality session.

– Blame free environment.