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Collaborative Practice in Healthcare

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Title: Collaborative Practice in Healthcare


1
Collaborative Practice in Healthcare

Designing Systems for Quality and Safety WebEx
  • Jeff Brown
  • Klein Associates
  • A Division of Applied Research Associates
  • January 09, 2007
  • Bloomington, MN

1
2
How well do we do at teamwork in healthcare??
  • 2007 Jeff Brown, Klein Assoc. Div. ARA

3
JCAHO Sentinel Events
4
Quality of Teamwork across 25 organizationsDiffe
rences between Physicians Nurses
Slide courtesy of Michael Leonard, MD
Quality of Teamwork Scale (1very low to 5very
high)
5
Teamwork Climate Annual Nurse Turnover
Slide courtesy of Michael Leonard, MD
 
reporting positive teamwork climate
6
I know the names of all the personnel that I
worked with during my last shift
Slide courtesy of Michael Leonard, MD
 
of respondents who agreed
7
Second Curve
--Martin Merry
future
present
8
How health care feels today depends on which
curve you are on
excitement
x
x
discouragement
9
  • This will require countercultural changes
  • in professional practice
  • Changes in patterns of interaction
  • and communication among frontline
  • personnel.
  • Use of new technological aids
  • Fundamental changes in
  • administrative control.
  • 2007 Jeff Brown, Klein Assoc. Div. ARA

10
The Importance of Communication
  • Outcome reliability is ultimately dependent on
  • effective decision-making and coordination of
  • action among members of small front-line
    groups.
  • Safety is founded in speech exchange
  • and social interaction.
  • After reviewing nearly 3,000 deaths or serious
  • injuries in hospitals, the Joint Commission
    found
  • that communication failures were an element
    in
  • essentially 100 of the cases reviewed, and
  • were the primary root cause failed defense
    in
  • over 60.
  • 2007 Jeff Brown, Klein Assoc. Div. ARA

11
Key Behavioral Safeguards of Team-based Safety1
Team Building
Planning
1Klinect, James (2000). CRM Lessons Learned
from LOSA. Bob Helmreichs LOSA Presentation
On-line slide show. University of Texas Human
Factors Research Project. http//www.psy.utexas.ed
u./psy/helmreich/nasaut.htm
  • 2007 Jeff Brown, Klein Assoc. Div. ARA

12
Structured Communication
Personnel with interdependent professional roles
communicate in consistent ways (briefings) that
optimize situation assessment, strategy
development and coordinated action. Patankar
and Taylor, 2000
  • 2007 Jeff Brown, Klein Assoc. Div. ARA

13
Elements
  • Reduced hierarchy
  • Communication Groundrules
  • Briefings
  • Shared Understanding/Situation Awareness
  • Contingency Plans and Tolerances
  • Monitoring and back-up
  • Updating
  • Adaptive action
  • Debriefings
  • Individual, team, task, technical, and
  • organizational performance
  • Hazards and error-provoking conditions
  • 2007 Jeff Brown, Klein Assoc. Div. ARA

14
Concord Collaborative Care Model Concord
Hospital, Concord, New Hampshire 2002 John M.
Eisenberg Patient Safety Award System
Innovation (JCAHO/NQF)

Courtesy of Paul Uhlig, MD, MPH
15
Collaborative Care
NP/PA
Patient and family
Nursing
a true team
Surgeon
Pharmacist
Home Care
Social Worker
Nutrition
PT/OT/RT
Spiritual Care
16
Patients and families as part of the care team
17
  • Concord Collaborative Care Model
  • all disciplines present at one time
  • patients and families are active participants
  • ordinary language or immediate translation
  • all information directed toward the patient
  • strength-based not illness-based
    (dignity, respect, self-care)
  • human factors science/HRO theory

18
  • Basic Principles of
  • Human Factors Science/ CRM/ HRO Theory
  • system rather than individual-centered approach
  • consistent patterns of information sharing
    (structured communications methodology)
  • overlapping roles/cross-checks/attentiveness
  • reduced hierarchy full disclosure trust
  • real-time glitch capture system learning

19
Collaborative Communication Cycle
Review (closure and carry over)
Theory of Situation (discussion /
alignment)
Plan of Action (discussion /
alignment)
System Glitches?
Glitch Book
Special Roles?
Annenberg IV 2002
20
Example GLITCHes
  • Stop date on pepcid and raglan not entered
  • Aortic dissection diagnosis missed--no echo in
    ER
  • ICU not aware of second heart surgerycase
    booked for the day
  • Doxepin recorded at BOT 25mg and 50 mg in chart
  • Patient placed on oxygen after exposed care
    giver's perfume
  • Surgeon's page inoperative when urgently needed
  • Lipitor noted as started, but no order existed
  • Swan catheter pulled back without discussion
    with surgeon
  • Discrepancies in parameters for lopressor
    between surgeons
  • Documented VRE, but no barrier precautions
  • Three different disciplines took blood pressure
    on the same patient in one
  • morning
  • Patient not off coumadin before surgery--surgery
    delayed
  • Patient asked to be taken back to bed, but was
    overlooked during shift
  • change
  • ID band with wrong name.
  • Noise in CCU prevented sleep
  • Patient concerned about the presence of
    construction workers in ICU
  • Foley not maintained
  • 2005 System Safety Group

21
Patient/Family Satisfaction
(97-99th percentile nationally) Concord Hospital
open heart surgery patients are happier than
mothers having babies
Source Concord Hospital Press-Ganey Surveys
22
Quality of Work Life
Not True
Very True
1 2 3
4 5
Sense of common purpose Sense of
personal/collective power Listen actively to
each other Share responsibility for
leadership Problem-solving process
apparent Feel respected Feel good about team
membership Sense of cohesion and team spirit
collaborative rounds traditional rounds
(February 2001, n16) Karen Reagan, RN BSN
23
Expected Observed
Institution of collaborative rounds and other
changes at green arrow
(4.8)
(2.1)
24
North Shore Medical CenterCardiac Surgery
  • Salem, Massachusetts

25
(No Transcript)
26
Collaborative Care Rounds
  • Patient
  • Family Members
  • Physician
  • Physician Assistant
  • Pharmacist
  • Chaplain
  • Primary Nurse
  • Clinical Nurse Specialist
  • Nurse Practitioner
  • Respiratory Therapist
  • Exercise Physiologist
  • Case Manager

27
HIPAA Compliance
28
All Case Operative Mortality Concord Expected
(NNE Risk Model) Concord Observed Salem
Observed
(Onset of collaborative care at red arrow)
(Onset of collaborative care at green arrow)
All Case Mortality (percent)
(4.8) Concord Expected
(2.1) Concord Observed
(0.3) Salem Observed
29
Where to Begin?
  • 1. What are your goals?
  • 2. Do you have clinical and administrative
    champions?
  • a. Is leadership ready for Rocks to be Lifted?
  • Examples
  • The example of OB crisis team development
  • The vertical safety audit
  • 3. Care transitions
  • Information and knowledge flow during transitions
  • Transitions of the patient among clinical units
  • Transitions in staff at shift turnover other
    transitions in authority and responsibility for
    care of the patient.
  • 4. Hows the relational infrastructure in your
    organization?
  • 2007 Jeff Brown, Klein Assoc. Div. ARA

30
Where to Begin?, continued
  • Build team performance from existing strengths of
    communication and interaction, consistent with
    behavioral safeguards against error and accident.
  • Pilot teamwork initiative where there are
    clinical championspassionate leaders who will
    model team work behaviors with inclusion and
    respect.
  • 2007 Jeff Brown, Klein Assoc. Div. ARA

31
Highly Reliable Systems
  • Are organized around highly functional teams.
  • Support work processes wherein team members
  • develop overlapping role and task knowledge.
  • Enable individual team members to exercise joint
  • accountability for all elements of the process
    to
  • which they contribute.
  • Are organized to optimize information processing
  • and decision-making among front-line personnel.
  • Continuously monitor and improve system
    performance
  • based on evolving front-line experience.
  • Leadership skills are a critical reliability
    factor in
  • complex systems.
  • 2007 Jeff Brown, Klein Assoc. Div. ARA

32
We Are Never Out of the Woods
The safety of socially and technically complex
systems is shaped dynamically, by people and
technology within and among organizations,
across varied and geographically distributed
environments, and over time. The ability to
reliably manage complex, high-consequence work is
a property of highly effective
(adaptive) frontline teams.
  • 2007 Jeff Brown, Klein Assoc. Div. ARA

33
References
  • Berwick, D., A Users Manual for the IOMs
    Quality Chasm Report. http//www.healthaffairs.o
    rg
  • Corrigon, J., Kohn, L.T., Donaldson, M.S.
    (Eds.). (2000). To Err is Human. Building a
    Safer health System. Washington, DC, National
    Academy Press.
  • Corrigon, J., Kohn, L.T., Donaldson, M.S.
    (Eds.). (2001). Crossing the Quality Chasm, a
    New Health System for the 21rst Century,
    Washington, DC, National Academy Press.
  • Helmreich, R.L. Merritt, A.C., Culture at Work
    in Aviation and Medicine National,
    Organization, and Professional Influences,Ashgate,
    1998
  • Klinect, James (2000). CRM Lessons Learned from
    LOSA. Bob Helmreichs LOSA Presentation On-line
    slide show. University of Texas Human Factors
    Research Project. http//www.psy.utexas.edu./psy/
    helmreich/nasaut.htm
  • Patankar, Manoj Brown, Jeffrey, Treadwell,
    Melinda, Safety Ethics Cases from Aviation,
    Healthcare, and Occupational and Environmental
    Health, Ashgate, 2005.

34
References
  • Nelson, E., Batalden, P., Huber, T., Mohr, J.,
    Godfrey, M., Headrick, L., Wasson, J.
    Microsystems in Health Care Part 1. Learning
    from High-Performing Front-Line Clinical Units.
    Joint Commission Journal on Quality, September
    2002.
  • Patterson, E., Render, M., Ebright, P. ,
    Repeating Human Performance Themes in Five
    Healthcare Adverse Events, Proceedings of the
    Human Factor and Ergonomics Society 46th Annual
    Meeting.
  • Roberts, K. and Bea, R., When Systems Fail From
    the Titanic to the Estonia, 2001,
    Organizational Dynamics, Volume 29, pp. 179-191
  • Rasmussen, J. (1982). Human errors A taxonomy
    for describing human malfunction in industrial
    installations. Journal of Occupational Accidents,
    4, 311-333.
  • Reason, J. (1990) Human Error, Cambridge
    University Press
  • Reason, J. (1997) Managing the Risk of
    Organizational Accidents, Ashgate

35
Jeff Brown 603-924-7983 jpbrown_at_ara.com
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