Patient Safety Exam 2

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culture of patient safety

the culture of an organization that focuses on the safety of the care that is delivered

premature closure

the decision to focus on only 1 diagnosis comes from many different causes

human factors engineering

the discipline that attempts to identify and address safety problems that arise due to the interaction between people, technology, and work environments

availability heuristic

the doctor thinks of what easily comes to mind based on some but not necessarily all the symptoms and clinical findings

mindfulness meditation

awareness of feelings either good or unpleasant and the development of capacity to lower one's reactivity to these feelings and avoid judgements about these feelings

red rules

rules that must be followed to the letter. Any deviation from these will bring work to a halt until compliance is achieved; in addition to relating to important and risky processes , must also be simple and easy to remember

communication, lack of standard system, lack of training, missing information, physical, lack of time, large number of patients

seven examples of barriers for effective handoffs

develop behavior based expectations, instill consistent work habits, hold each other accountable, measure and address errors, provide correct action and follow up

seven ways that patient safety can be improved through an educational process

fatigue

weariness and depleted energy

rapid response team

when a patient demonstrates signs of imminent clinical deterioration, a team of providers is summoned to the bedside to immediately assess and treat the patient with the goal of preventing adverse clinical outcomes

catheter associated urinary tract infection

CAUTI stands for this

central line associated blood stream infection

CLABSI stands for this

sick, identifying data, general hospital course, new events, overall health status, upcoming possibilities, tasks to complete

SIGN OUT stands for this; handoff technique

swiss cheese model of error

a model that illustrates how analyses of major accidents and catastrophic systems failures tend to reveal multiple, smaller failures leading up to the actual hazard. In the model, each slice of cheese represents a safety barrier or precaution relevant to a particular hazard

communication and optimal resolution

a process that health care institution and practitioners can use to respond in a timely, thorough, and just way when unexpected events cause possible harm

burnout

a syndrome of 1) depersonalization 2) emotional exhaustion and 3) poor personal accomplishment associated with decreased work performance

failure mode effective analysis

a team based systematic and proactive approach for identifying the ways that a process can fail, why it might fail, the effects of that failure and how it can be made safer

event reporting

also known as incident reporting; ubiquitous system in hospitals

close calls

also known as near misses; an error that doesn't cause any harm but only because of chance

sentinel event

an adverse event in which death or serious physiological harm to a patient has occurred; it is usually used to refer to events that are not at all expected or acceptable

root cause analysis

an approach commonly used in health care to understand errors and accidents after they occur; asking what happened, why did it happen, and what can be done to prevent it from happening again.

Team STEPPS

an evidence-based set of teamwork tools aimed at optimizing patient outcomes by improving communication and teamwork skills among health care professionals

high reliability organization

an organization that carries out intrinsically complex and hazardous work but achieves consistently safe and effective performance

anchoring

cognitive heuristic error type in which event likelihood is based on starting point

representative

cognitive heuristic error type in which the event likelihood based on resemblance to other well defined events

disclosure

communication to the patient and as appropriate to the family concerning what is known about a serious unanticipated outcome

systems thinking

complexity theory differs from this by emphasizing the interaction between local systems and their environment

resilience

connections to colleagues, patients and the profession is fundamental to maintaining this

lean theory

critically examines processes to reduce wasteful activities that add no value for the patient

appreciative inquiry

discussion of techniques that help one work through difficult clinical situations; use of listening and telling stories

sleepiness

drowsiness and decreased alertness

handoffs

due to the limitation of work hours, there was an increase in these, which suggested worse patient outcomes

checklists, computer assisted care, communication techniques, red rules, standardization, teamwork, accountability, rapid response teams, review of infrastructure, near misses, root cause analysis

eleven aspects that helped to improve patient care

rule based error

error type that refers to errors in algorithms, formulas, experiential do's/don'ts; examples include treatment protocols, checking allergies before medications, etc.

skill based error

error type that refers to errors in tasks that are simple, familiar, routine, straightforward and repetitive; examples include taking phone messages, getting gas, etc.

knowledge base error

error type that refers to errors in unknown, unfamiliar, or new situations; examples include finding a lost object with unknown owner

device related errors

errors that occur due to the medical equipment malfunctioning; cardiac pacemaker errors

monitoring errors

errors that occur when the caretaker does not observe a red flag; examples include alert fatigue and drug monitoring

patient identification errors

errors that occur when the wrong patient is treated; improved transfusion process by bar coding, using 2 patient identifiers and verbal confirmation of lab results

large volume, receive results after patient has left, paper based filing, no context

examples of what makes lab results difficult to receive in outpatient care

affective bias

feelings for/against a patient that colors one's approach toward the patient

shift change, day to night call, unit to unit, laboratory and imaging tests, and hospital discharge

five examples of types of handoffs

time limitations, implicit assumptions, authority gradients, diffusion of responsibility, and handoff information

five factors that contribute to medical decision making errors

Care for the caregiver

following serious, unintentional harm due to systems failures and/or errors that resulted from human performance failures, the involved caregivers should receive timely and systematic care

phonetic protocol

for all consonants say a word that sounds like the letter; for example Z as in zebra

numeric protocol

for all two digit numbers say the numbers separately; for example 1, 5 instead of fifteen

read/repeat back, SBAR, numeric protocols, ask questions

four communication techniques that allow HCWs to do so clearly

quantitative work overload, deficiency in work related role models, deficiency in job resources, emotionally demanding situations

four examples of occupational factors that lead to burnout

acknowledgment of the high-risk nature of an organization's activities, a blame-free environment where individuals are able to report errors, encouragement of collaboration across ranks and disciplines, organizational commitment

four key features to building a culture of safety

Stop, think, act, review

four steps that can be taken to combat slips or lapses associated with skill based errors

action, assertion, adherence, and memory

four ways in which patients can cause medical errors to occur

provide protected time for learners to share concerns, acknowledge and appreciate all learners by sharing a life story, develop mentoring networks, provide maximal patient engagement

four ways to protect against burnout

incident reporting

frequently used as a general term for all voluntary patient safety event reporting systems, which rely on those involved in events to provide detailed information.

just culture

holds the individuals to account for reckless behavior while also recognizing that people make mistakes and aren't responsible for systems; people feel comfortable disclosing error, including their own

triple aim

improving the health of the population, enhancing the care and outcomes of the patient and reducing per capita health costs

situation, background, assess and recommendation

in SBAR, these four steps are taken to communicate effectively regarding a patient; used in urgent situations

ask, request, concern, chain of command

in this model, a subordinate can communicate when they believe an error has occurred effectively to a superior

systems approach

medicine has traditionally treated quality problems and errors as failings on the part of individual providers, this approach takes the view that most errors reflect predictable human failings in the context of poorly designed systems; identifies situations or factors likely to give rise to human error and implements system changes that will reduce their occurrence or minimize their impact on patients

individual factors

men, white, younger, unmarried, family related stress, dissatisfaction, spouses that work too much or too little, neuroticism, residents whose fathers were not doctors, non-parent, lower agreeableness, poorer health, mood disturbance, somatic complaints, alcohol abuse, anxiety are examples of this

knowledge base error

most common error type made in hospitals

prevent infection

national patient safety goal that has been improved substantially by limiting ventilator, central line, and urine catheter infections

use medicines safely

national patient safety goal that has been improved substantially by using pop up drug interactions

prevent mistakes in surgery

national patient safety goal that has been improved substantially by using surgery checklists and time outs

identify patient safety risks

national patient safety goal; find out which patients are most likely to try to commit suicide

use medicines safely

national patient safety goal; includes before a procedure, label medicines that are not labeled; take extra care with patients who take medicines to thin their blood; record and pass along correct information about a patient's medicines

improve staff communication

national patient safety goal; includes get important test results to the right staff person on time

use alarms safely

national patient safety goal; make improvements to ensure that alarms on medical equipment are hear and responded to on time

prevent mistakes in surgery

national patient safety goal; make sure that correct surgery is done on the correct patient and correct place on the patient's body; mark the correct place on the patient's body where the surgery is to be done

identify patients correctly

national patient safety goal; requires that at least two way to identify patient is used when care is being given

prevent infection

national patient safety goal; use the hand cleaning guidelines from the centers for disease control and prevention or the World Health Organization; use proven guidelines to prevent infections that are difficult to treat, from central lines, after surgery, and a result of catheterization

depersonalization

one of the metrics of Maslach Burnout Inventory; negative, cynical, detached response to other people

personal accomplishments reduction

one of the metrics of Maslach Burnout Inventory; one feels less competent with one's work

emotional exhaustion

one of the metrics of the Maslach Burnout Inventory; overextended and depletions of one's emotional resources

mindfulness

one way to combat burnout is through this; can be done through meditation or narrative

transparency

openly providing information about the safety and quality of care with staff, partners, patients and families

15.6%

percentage of US college educated 22-34 year olds that met criteria for alcohol abuse/dependence

32.4%

percentage of medical students that met criteria for alcohol abuse/dependence

60%

percentage of physicians that report burnout

timeout

planned periods of quiet and/or interdisciplinary discussion focused on ensuring that key procedural details have been addressed.

complexity theory

provides an approach to understanding the ways in which some adaptive systems produce novel behavior not expected from the properties of their individual components

QV and V

questioning attitude technique; steps include qualify the source of info, validate the info with one's own abilities and experiences, and verify with a second source

computerized physician order entry

refers to any system in which clinicians directly place orders electronically with the orders transmitted directly to the recipient; ensure legible orders and have the potential to sharply reduce medication prescribing errors

planned redundancy, stress reduction, shift time limits to reduce human error, reduce number of handoffs, test tracking, and explicit rules for when to contact ordering provider

six ways that handoffs can be improved in the hospital setting

six sigma

striving for near perfection in the performance of a process; derived from the Greek letter describing the standard deviation from the norm; targets a defect rate of < 3.4 per million opportunities

never event

term introduced by the national quality forum to refer to 29 types of medical errors; identified as being so serious and preventable that they should never happen

patient, plan, purpose, problems and precautions

the five p's in a handoff

medication reconciliation

the process of avoiding medication inconsistencies that occur with the transfer of care by reviewing the patient's current medication regimen and comparing it with the regimen being considered for the new setting of care

handoff

the process when one health care professional updates another on the status of one or more patients for the purpose of taking over their care

medical errors

these were not necessarily reduced with a reduction in work hours

center for medicare and medicaid services

this federal program pays hospitals and physicians for services rendered

sleep hygiene

this improved for residents when the work week was reduced

expert source

this is the corrective action for a knowledge base error

Joint Commission

this national group accredits healthcare organizations

think twice before breaking a rule

this should be done to fix rule based errors; rule based errors occur because others believe rules are meant to be broken, rules are used incorrectly, or the incorrect rule is chosen for a given situation

education

this was negatively impacted for residents when the work week was reduced

highest priority, simple action, limited number

three characteristics of red rules

cognitive and motor skill deteriorate, impairment equal to alcohol consumption and increased risk of MVAs

three ramifications of the medical student and physician fatigue, stress and burnout

premature closure

using an availability heuristic may lead to this

VAP

ventilator associated pneumonia

narrative medicine

write stories about personal experience on topics such as burnout and self care


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