Joint Commission journal on quality and patient safety / Joint Commission Resources
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Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf · Mar 2012
A case study on the safety impact of implementing smart patient-controlled analgesic pumps at a tertiary care academic medical center.
As with the use of any therapy involving opioids, patient-controlled analgesia (PCA)-related errors can lead to overdose and even death. "Smart" (computerized) pumps have medication safety enhancements, particularly those related to operator errors during administration, to improve overall safety and efficacy. After the occurrence of PCA-related errors that occurred at a tertiary care academic medical center, an analysis of PCA errors was conducted. The introduction of smart pumps was identified as a possible solution, and the medical center adopted the technology in 2006. A study was conducted to investigate the impact of implementation. ⋯ Smart PCA pumps had an important positive impact on PCA-related patient safety at the medical center. Other facilities should adopt PCA devices with additional safety features such as bar-code verification of the drug and concentration, as well as dosage limits, to prevent pump-programming errors.
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Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf · Mar 2012
Implementing a perioperative handoff tool to improve postprocedural patient transfers.
Handoffs in the perioperative setting--the period during which the patient leaves the operating room (OR) and arrives at the postanesthesia care unit (PACU) or intensive care unit (ICU)--have received little attention. A perioperative handoff tool consisting of an OR-to-ICU/PACU protocol and checklists incorporates a defined process, a specified team structure, a procedure for technology transfer, and clearly defined information elements to share. The tool could be applied to any periprocedural setting in which a patient is physically transferred from the procedural location (with the associated procedural team) to a postprocedural care unit with a different care team.
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Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf · Feb 2012
Ongoing professional performance evaluation (OPPE) using automatically captured electronic anesthesia data.
The Massachusetts General Hospital (Boston), a large academic center providing anesthesia services for more than 49,000 procedures each year, created an Ongoing Professional Practice Evaluation (OPPE) process that could use readily available, automatically captured electronic information from its vendor-provided anesthesia information management system. ⋯ A novel, automated, and continuous reporting system for physician credentialing that uses the existing clinical information system infrastructure can serve as a key element of a comprehensive clinical performance evaluation that measures both technical and generalizable clinical skill sets. It is not intended to provide a complete system for measuring competence but rather to serve as a first-round warning mechanism and metric scoring tool to identify problems and potential performance noncompliance issues.
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Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf · Feb 2012
Improving venous thromboembolism prevention processes and outcomes at a community hospital.
Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a cause of significant morbidity and mortality in hospitalized patients in the United States. Quality improvement (QI) strategies to increase the rates of prophylaxis in patients at-risk for VTE have been shown to be successful. The development of a formal, active strategy addressing the prevention of VTE, as a written, institutionwide VTE prophylaxis policy, presents a challenge for hospitals ⋯ Keys to the success of this QI program included leveraging multidisciplinary VTE committee members, physician champions, multiple approaches to communication and education, and providing evidence to support the changes. Sharing the hospital's QI process may provide a model for other hospitals challenged with developing and sustaining positive outcomes in patients at risk for VTE.
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Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf · Jan 2012
Using the Opportunity Estimator tool to improve engagement in a quality and safety intervention.
Teams throughout the United States participating in a program to reduce central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSIs) are using the Opportunity Estimator. This web-based tool translates CLABSI-related data into "opportunity estimates" of the patient lives and money that could be saved by reducing these infections.