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General Principles

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2001 IOM Report-Crossing the Quality Chasm ... IOM Crossing the Quality Chasm. New Rules for Care. Safety as a system priority ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: General Principles


1
building
THE FOUNDATIONS
for patient SAFETY
collaboration
communication
education
Overview and IOM Reports
2
How the Focus on Quality Patient Safety Came to
Attention
  • Presidential Actions
  • Quality of Healthcare In America Project
  • Institute of Medicine Reports
  • Media Attention
  • Business Groups
  • Responses
  • Federal/State/JCAHO

3
Presidential Actions
  • 1997- President establishes Advisory Commission
    on Consumer Protection and Quality in the Health
    Care Industry
  • 1998- President establishes Quality Interagency
    Coordination Task Force (QuIC)
  • 1998- Vice President launches National Forum for
    Health Care Quality Measurement and Reporting

4
Quality of Healthcare in America Project
  • Initiated by IOM in June, 1998
  • Focus Quality of care
  • Policy framework To improve quality foster
    accountability
  • Produce reports
  • Aligning financial incentives to reward quality
    care the critical role of information
    technology as tool for measuring understanding
    quality

5
Institute of Medicine Reports
IOM
  • 1999 IOM Report-To Err is Human. Building a Safer
    Healthcare System
  • 2001 IOM Report-Crossing the Quality Chasm
  • 2001 IOM Report-Envisioning the National Health
    Care Quality Report

IOM
IOM
6
Overview
Congress
President
Establishes
Mandates
Advisory Commission on Consumer Protection and
Quality in the Healthcare Industry
Changed AHCPR to AHRQ Mandated AHRQ to develop
national report on quality
Creates
Quality of Healthcare in America Project
Contracts
AHRQ requested IOM to draft strategies for
national report IOM Report Envisioning the
National Health Care Quality Report
Output
Output
IOM Report To Err is Human
IOM Report Crossing the Quality Chasm
Output
7
Institute of Medicine
  • Medical arm of the National Academy of Sciences
  • The report is from a subgroup called the
    Committee on Quality of Care in Medicine
  • No regulatory authority
  • Three areas of study
  • Misuse of Medicine (errors) - the 1999 report
  • Overuse of Medicine
  • Underuse of Medicine

8
Institute of Medicine Report1999 Report To Err
is Human
  • Definitions
  • Data/Studies
  • Approach
  • Conclusions
  • Recommendations

9
IOM To Err is Human Definitions
  • Adverse Event
  • Injury caused by medical management rather than
    underlying disease/condition of patient
  • Error
  • 1) Planning Use of a wrong plan to achieve
    desired aim
  • 2) Execution Failure of a planned action to be
    completed as intended
  • Not all, but a sizeable of AE are result of
    Error

  • Source IOM Report

10
IOM To Err is Human Data/Studies
  • 44,000 - 98,000 deaths/year
  • 8th leading cause of death, ahead of car crashes,
    breast cancer AIDS
  • 17 - 29 billion in lost income, disability and
    health care costs
  • Adverse events occur in 2.9 - 3.7 of
    hospitalizations
  • Preventable injuries in hospitals affect 3-4 of
    patients

Error rate is equivalent to two 747s crashing
every week
11
IOM To Err is Human Data/Studies
  • New York (1984 data)
  • 3.7 hospitalized patients have adverse events
  • 13.6 of adverse events led to death
  • Colorado/Utah(1992 data)
  • 2.9 hospitalized patients have adverse events
  • 8.8 of adverse events led to death

(Lucian Leape et al)
12
IOM To Err is Human Data/Studies
Colorado/Utah
New York
Extrapolation
  • United States
  • 33.6 million admissions to US hospitals in 1997
  • 44,000 - 98,000 Americans die as result of
    adverse events

13
IOM To Err is Human Approach
  • Establish a national focus on patient safety
  • Identify and learn from errors through mandatory
    and voluntary reporting systems
  • Raise standards and expectation for improvements
    with multiple agencies, professionals, and
    consumers
  • Implement safe practices at the delivery level
    and build safety culture

14
IOM To Err is Human Conclusions
  • Majority of problems are systems problems not the
    fault of individuals with problems wired into
    systems
  • Only 2-5 errors are related to individuals
  • System issues -- shifting employees around would
    not result in an improved error rate
  • Human factor research shows that errors are
    inevitable

15
IOM To Err is Human Conclusions
  • Harm occurs to one patient at at time making
    accidents less visible
  • No agency or organization w/primary
    responsibility for safety
  • Dont know the real picture or baseline
  • Dont have current data

16
IOM To Err is Human Conclusions
  • Punitive response not effective to prevent
    recurrence
  • Need to manage mistakes differently
  • Aviation/nuclear power models may help

17
IOM To Err is Human Recommendations
  • Leadership and Knowledge
  • Create a Center for Patient Safety
  • Identifying Learning from Errors
  • Nationwide Mandatory Reporting System
  • Voluntary Reporting Efforts
  • Protection of Sources

18
IOM To Err is Human Recommendations
  • Setting Performance Standards Expectations
  • Focus on Patient Safety
  • Licensing Bodies and Professional Societies
  • FDA Activities
  • Implementing Safety Systems in Healthcare
    Organizations
  • Specific Programs
  • Improve Medication Delivery

19
IOM To Err is Human Leadership Role
  • Provide Leadership
  • Make patient safety a corporate priority
  • Make patient safety everyones responsibility
  • Make clear assignments and set expectations
  • Provide human and financial resources
  • Develop effective mechanisms for
    identifying/dealing with unsafe practitioners

20
IOM To Err is Human Leadership Role
  • Respect Human Limits
  • Design jobs for safety
  • Simplify processes and systems
  • Standardize processes
  • Promote Effective Teams
  • Train teams
  • Involve patients

21
IOM To Err is Human Leadership Role
  • Anticipate the Unexpected
  • Improve access to information
  • Create a Learning Environment
  • Encourage recognition and reporting
  • Ensure no reprisals for reporting
  • Develop a culture of openness and communication
  • Implement feedback and learning from mistakes

22
Key Learnings
  • This report made huge impact on health care,
    media, and spurred policy makers.
  • The patient safety movement has taken off
    nationally and internationally.
  • New collaboratives and alliances have been
    created on patient safety.
  • Legislation has been sparked at federal and state
    level.
  • Errors will remain a target for media and
    consumer groups.

23
IOM 2001 ReportCrossing the Quality Chasm
Problems
  • Widespread defects in current health care system
    with variation in care delivered
  • Misalignment of financial system
  • Huge growth in knowledge and advances in
    technology
  • Gaps in safe and appropriate care
  • Structure does not make best use of resources

24
IOM Crossing the Quality ChasmAgenda
  • All health care constituencies commit to a
    national statement of purpose for the health care
    system as a whole and to a shared agenda of six
    aims for improvement.
  • Clinicians and patients and organizations support
    care delivery, adopt a new set of principles to
    guide redesign.

25
IOM Crossing the Quality ChasmAgenda
  • All health care constituencies commit to a
    national statement of purpose for the health care
    system as a whole and to a shared agenda of six
    aims for improvement.
  • Clinicians and patients and organizations support
    care delivery, adopt a new set of principles to
    guide redesign.

26
IOM Crossing the Quality ChasmAgenda
  • DHHS identify priority conditions for initial
    efforts resource allocation change process.
  • Organizations design/implement more effective
    support processes.
  • All stakeholders create an environment that
    fosters and rewards improvement.

27
IOM Crossing the Quality Chasm Six Aims
  • Patient-Centered
  • Effective
  • Timely
  • Equitable
  • Safe
  • Efficient

28
IOM Crossing the Quality ChasmNew Rules for Care
  • Care based on continuous healing relationships
  • Customization based on patient needs/values
  • Patient as the source of control
  • Shared knowledge- free flow of information
  • Evidence based decision making

29
IOM Crossing the Quality ChasmNew Rules for Care
  • Safety as a system priority
  • Need for transparency
  • Anticipation of needs
  • Continuous decrease of waste
  • Cooperation among clinicians

30
IOM Crossing the Quality ChasmRecommendations
  • Reduce the burden of illness, injury, and
    disability and improve health and functioning of
    people of US.
  • Pursue six major aims.
  • Congress should authorize funds for processes for
    the six aims
  • Redesign health care according to ten new rules
    for care.

31
IOM Crossing the Quality ChasmRecommendations
  • AHRQ to identify at least 15 conditions for
    study, work with NQF and stakeholders to improve
    quality in each condition.
  • Congress should establish Innovation Fund for
    projects to improve quality care.
  • AHRQ and others should convene workshops on new
    approaches.
  • DHHS should establish program to make scientific
    evidence useful and accessible to clinicians.

32
IOM Crossing the Quality ChasmRecommendations
  • National commitment to build information
    infrastructure to support health care delivery.
  • Purchasers should remove barriers to payment
    method that impede quality improvement.
  • Develop research agenda to study alignment of
    payment methods with quality improvement goals.
  • Summit of leaders to address strategies for
    clinical education for 21st century.
  • AHRQ to fund research to study system changes and
    achievement of six aims.

33
IOM Crossing the Quality ChasmRedesign
Imperatives
New Process
  • Redesign care processes
  • Effective use of information technologies
  • Knowledge and skills management

34
IOM Crossing the Quality ChasmRedesign
Imperatives
New Process
  • Development of effective teams
  • Coordination of care across patient conditions,
    services, and settings over time.
  • Use of performance and outcome measurement for
    continuous quality improvement and accountability.

35
Key Learnings
  • Little new information.
  • Less influential that 1999 report.
  • Little action taken by government on funding
    recommendations.
  • Creates six new criteria to assess care.
  • Validates issues, especially misalignment of
    payment methods and quality.

36
Institute of Medicine Report 2001Envisioning the
National Health Care Quality Report
  • Data Set Framework
  • Measures
  • Data Sources
  • The Report

37
IOM Envisioning the National Health Care Quality
Report Recommendations
  • Framework to address two dimensions components
    of health care quality and consumer perspective.
  • AHRQ to apply uniform criteria for measures
  • AHRQ to have advisory body to assess improvements
    of report.

38
IOM Envisioning the National Health Care Quality
Report Recommendations
  • AHRQ to set long term goal for approach to assess
    and measure quality of care for national data
    set.
  • AHRQ to consider combining individual measures
    into summary measures and make available to
    public.
  • Data sources should be assessed by criteria.

39
IOM Envisioning the National Health Care Quality
Report Recommendations
  • AHRQ to draw on public and private data sources.
  • Data should be nationally representative and
    reportable at state level.
  • Report should be in several versions for
    different audiences.

40
Key Learnings
  • IOM was asked by AHRQ to plan for national
    quality report on health care.
  • In 1999 legislation Congress mandated a report be
    developed and published annually starting in 2003
    by AHRQ.
  • The report is part of overall national quality
    focus.
  • There is no one agency with oversight for quality
    of care or patient safety. The report may bridge
    gaps.
  • There is much work still to be done in creating a
    report.

41
Legislative Response Federal
  • Kennedy-Frist-Jeffords Patients Safety Act of
    2001
  • Snowe-Graham (S824) Medication Errors Reduction
    Act of 2001
  • Schumer (S705) Health Information Technology and
    Quality Improvement Act of 2001
  • Specter (S24) Health Care Assurance Act of 2001

42
Legislative Response State
  • CS/SB 1558 Omnibus health care bill adopted by
    2001 Florida legislature (section 63).
  • Primarily in response to Florida Commission on
    Excellence in Health Care recommendations.
  • Mainly regulatory changes little funding.

43
Legislative Response StateKey Elements
  • AHCA to post on web quarterly summaries and trend
    analysis of adverse incident reports.
  • Civil immunity for RM providing info required by
    law.
  • Civil penalties to anyone who prevents RM from
    reporting incidents.
  • Two hour course mandated on safety.

44
Legislative Response StateKey Elements
  • Hospitals and ASC to evaluate systems for
    wrong-site surgery, wrong patient, wrong
    procedure, and unnecessary procedure.
  • Commission of the above incidents as grounds for
    disciplinary action.
  • Leaving a foreign body in patient as grounds for
    disciplinary action.
  • DOH and AHCA to review reporting requirements to
    eliminate duplication.

45
Joint Commission
  • Implemented new patient safety standards July 1,
    200.1
  • Created a focus on errors via sentinel event
    standards with learnings aggregated and
    published.
  • Drafted standards on staffing effectiveness with
    measures related to human resources and clinical
    services.
  • Has utilized a framework for quality improvement
    with dimensions that parallel IOM report.

46
References/Resources
  • Institute of Medicine, To Err is Human. Building
    a Safer Health System.(2000). National Academy
    Press. Washington, DC.
  • Institute of Medicine, Crossing the Quality
    Chasm. (2001). National Academy Press.
    Washington, DC.

47
References/Resources
  • Institute of Medicine, Envisioning the National
    Health Care Quality Report. (2001). National
    Academy Press. Washington, DC.
  • FHA 2001 Legislative Summary (May 2001)
    www.fha.org
  • FHA Patient Safety www.fha.org/quality.html
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