UNIVERSAL HEALTH SERVICES - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 28
About This Presentation
Title:

UNIVERSAL HEALTH SERVICES

Description:

Universal Health Services -- Managing Risk in Behavioral Health Care. UNIVERSAL HEALTH SERVICES ... Pantyhose. Bathrobe sash. Braided belt made from a patient gown ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:365
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 29
Provided by: kathyko
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: UNIVERSAL HEALTH SERVICES


1
UNIVERSAL HEALTH SERVICES
  • KATHY KORDELSKI
  • CORPORATE BEHAVIORAL HEALTH RISK MANAGER

2
SUICIDE PREVENTION
  • Best Practices Established by Patient Safety
    Councils
  • Source materials include UHS protocols and JCAHO
    literature

3
ASSESSMENT
  • Include direct questions regarding precipitating
    factors
  • Depression, hopelessness
  • Suicide ideation, plans
  • Past self harm, suicide attempts and/or aborted
    attempts
  • Agitation, panic, anxiety, sleep
    difficulties/sleeplessness
  • Recent bereavement
  • Access to weapons

4
ASSESSMENT
  • Stressors
  • Conflicts in interpersonal relationships/support
    systems
  • Absence of responsibility for children
  • Job loss/financial stress
  • Patient stressors are identified from the
    patients perspective, not the staffs and are
    taken seriously

5
ASSESSMENT
  • Identify medical/high risk factors
  • Imminent risks co-morbid panic symptoms, severe
    anxious depression, medical conditions CNS
    diseases, head injuries, chronic pain, AIDS
  • Alcohol or other substance abuse or any increase
    in use
  • Past hospitalizations for psychiatric disorders
    cycling episodes (bipolar)

6
ASSESSMENT
  • Assessments and re-assessments are conducted at
    critical stages of treatment
  • Admission
  • Change in privilege level
  • Change in mental status
  • After a concern or reported change in patient
    condition by a family member
  • Prior to discharge

7
TREATMENT
  • Focus is on things that can be changed
  • Patients psychological condition symptoms
  • Agitation
  • Anxiety
  • Sleeplessness

8
THERAPEUTIC MILIEU
  • Staff interactions and attitudes can deeply
    affect a patients decision regarding suicide
  • Staffs actions are focused on increasing patient
    self esteem/decreasing potential for suicide

9
CONTRACTS FOR SAFETY
  • Use of these contracts are to be avoided
  • Patients may view them as a failure of empathy by
    the caregiver
  • No evidence that they prevent suicide, determine
    lethality or mitigate liability
  • Ask patient and/or family to identify specific
    interventions that were effective in previous
    attempts

10
Items Used in Suicide Attempts
  • Draw strings from clothing
  • Shoe laces
  • Belts
  • Shower curtains
  • Bed sheets
  • Towels
  • Ace bandages
  • Torn cloth from a mattress
  • Pantyhose
  • Bathrobe sash
  • Braided belt made from a patient gown

11
Methods
  • Hanging from a showerhead/shower rod
  • Item tied to sink pipes and fell/push forward
  • Item looped over a door frame
  • Bathtub

12
PATIENT MONITORING
  • Staff complete rounds per physician order and
    vary the times
  • Staff visually check the patient observes
    patient breathing ( if patient is sleeping)
  • Staff obtains verbal response (if patient is in
    the shower/bathroom)
  • Staff reports when patient isolates self in
    bedroom or other areas of the unit during
    programming time
  • Shower times are scheduled to allow adequate
    monitoring

13
PATIENT MONITORING
  • Hand-off patients from staff to staff between
    unstructured activities
  • Staff hand-off directly to the next assigned
    staff each patient is known to the person taking
    over the checks
  • Same sex staff assigned to provide 11
  • Enforcement of patient observation levels

14
ENVIRONMENT
  • Design patient care areas to eliminate
    environmental elements that could facilitate
    suicide attempts
  • Provide patients with alternatives to belts and
    shoelaces
  • Installing and frequently testing breakaway
    shower rods and fixtures
  • Lock bathroom doors ( unless contraindicated by
    State Law) and other non-supervised areas when
    not in immediate use

15
ENVIRONMENT
  • Assigning at risk patients to rooms with a
    roommate and/or close to the nurses station
  • Replacement of items that could support hanging
  • Bedroom doors locked and opened only during
    specific times (unless contraindicated by State
    Law)

16
PATIENT/FAMILY EDUCATION
  • Patient orientation provide alternatives for
    self harm behavior
  • Provide educational handouts/packets
  • How to handle a Bad Day
  • How to call your physician
  • How to Ask for Help
  • How to Recognize Relapse
  • What to do if you miss a medication dose

17
Discharge Planning/Aftercare
  • Address issues motivating patients to commit
    suicide
  • Pre-discharge suicide risk assessment completed
    on day of discharge
  • Distribute ER Help card with resource phone
    numbers wallet sized and laminated

18
Discharge Planning/Aftercare
  • Discharge criteria screens for and prevents
    patients at risk for suicide from being
    discharged prematurely
  • Get family commitment to remove potential weapons
  • To assist in medication compliance
  • To be available and provide support and safety
    measures
  • Discharges on Friday and Saturday are minimized
    if there is no available support for the at-risk
    patient

19
Discharge Planning/Aftercare
  • Discharge with 2-week supply of medications with
    1 refill vs. one 30 day prescription to reduce
    chances of overdose
  • Second opinion obtained prior to discharge when
    there is doubt about the patients risk
  • No show appointments are immediately followed up
    with a phone call to patient and/or family to
    determine the reason
  • Policy defines process for staff response to
    patient calls received after discharge regarding
    relapse and/or suicidal thoughts and actions.
    Staff appropriately initiate suicide prevention
    intervention.

20
Prevention of Sexual Misconduct
  • Best Practices Established by Patient Safety
    Councils

21
Sexual Misconduct Prevention
  • Staff Education
  • Assessment/Identification
  • Staffing/Patient Monitoring
  • Programming
  • Environment

22
Staff Education
  • Annual In-service and competencies
  • Staff education in completing patient rounds
  • Education completed by Medical Director
  • Enhanced new hire orientation on supervision of
    patients
  • Develop age-specific posters regarding sexual
    boundaries, behaviors
  • Develop group materials for patient education on
    sexual boundaries, behaviors, responsibility

23
Staff Education
  • Review of previous treatment documentation and
    assessment data
  • Addressing high-risk behaviors in treatment
    planning
  • Early intervention in pt/pt relationships
  • Appropriate response to incidents
  • Reporting requirements for incidents
  • Monitoring procedures
  • Considering risk factors when making room
    assignments

24
Assessments/Identification
  • SAO questions moved to more predominant place on
    the Intake Call Sheet to cue staff to ask about
    SAO with the same thoughtfulness as suicide
  • Nursing assessment revised to include data
    collection on sexual abuse/behavior history
  • Educate Physicians/Admissions staff on
    identification of risk factors upon admission
  • Ensure procedures are developed to obtain
    previous discharge summaries to review past
    history
  • Revise hospital forms to ensure prompt
    identification of SAO risk factors

25
Staffing/Patient Monitoring
  • Enforce wake-up times, lights out times and night
    security/bed checks
  • Video camera surveillance in hallways and common
    areas
  • Install motion detectors to alert staff of
    patients movements at night
  • Charge Nurse, House Supervisor complete random
    checks of rounds sheets
  • Zone Supervision Procedures implemented
  • Adolescents placed on q 15 minute checks from
    bedtime through change of shift

26
Staffing/Patient Monitoring
  • Assign patients to bathroom/bedroom activities
    one at a time prevent two or more patients in
    bathroom/bedroom at a time
  • Station staff in hallways all shifts
  • Staff assignment process redesigned to specify
    supervision requirements crisis intervention
  • Develop and implement a protocol for Sexual
    Acting out Precautions and Patient Observation

27
Programming
  • Modify visiting hours to occur during family
    sessions only comply with state guidelines
  • Eliminate family visitation from weekends
    replaced with family service sessions scheduled
    during weekdays comply with state guidelines
  • Eliminate in-room quiet time for youth
  • Implement structured groups during change of
    shift both day and evening
  • Frequent review of treatment program schedules to
    ensure structure and accountability
  • Implement Neighborhood Watch program

28
Environment
  • Segregate male and female smoke breaks
  • Install mirrors in hallways
  • Single sex utilization of hallway showers
  • Locked bathrooms at all times
  • Alarms on patient bedroom doors
  • Creation of male and female hallways
  • Bedrooms doors locked on youth and opened during
    specified times
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com