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What you need to know as Risk Manager but are afraid to ask!

What you need to know as Risk Manager but are afraid to ask!. MEDICAL EQUIPMENT MANAGEMENT. EOC/PATIENT SAFETY COMMITTEE. MEDICAL EQUIPMENT MANAGEMENT. Program Manager. Safe Medical Device Act. Equipment Inventory. Repair Services. Product/Device Recall. Preventive Maintenance/

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What you need to know as Risk Manager but are afraid to ask!

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  1. What you need to know as Risk Manager but are afraid to ask!

  2. MEDICAL EQUIPMENT MANAGEMENT EOC/PATIENT SAFETY COMMITTEE MEDICAL EQUIPMENT MANAGEMENT Program Manager Safe Medical Device Act Equipment Inventory Repair Services Product/Device Recall Preventive Maintenance/ Inspection Equipment Failure Procedures User/Maintainer Education

  3. What’s Happening • 3/10/08 Jury Awards $40.1 Million after medical device chars heart. • Guidant settlement: $195 million for 4,000 claims • Medtronic Defibrillators: $114 Million settlement. Estimated 20,000 patients required replacements. • Stents, hernia patches, implants…….

  4. What’s happened • ECRI vs. RASMAS • One Lonely Materials Manager • Closing the Loop on recalls

  5. Joint Commission Requirements • EC.1.10 The organization ensures a process exists for responding to product safety recalls by appropriate organization staff.

  6. Elements of Recall Program Recall Coordinator

  7. Recall Responders(Domains) • Biomedical Devices • Blood Products • Biologics • Engineering/Facilites • Food/Nutrition • Information Systems • Laboratory Products • Medical Supplies • OR Products • Pharmaceuticals • Radiology • Tissue

  8. The Recall Process • Steris System One (SSI) Processor • Did you call together a Recall team? • Remember – The JC requires a process. If your doing it take credit for it!

  9. More about Steris…. • Widely used system in surgery and endoscopy for sterilization of endoscopes and medical devices. • FDA actions not based on noscomial events or strings of infections. • Early February 2010 FDA recommended 6 months for transition.

  10. SS1…latest • FDA required transition to alternative technology extended 18 months. • April 2010 – FDA announces agreement; cash rebate or trade-in. • 100% credit for SS1 accessories.

  11. Risk Recommendations • Patience for evolving and new technology. • Accurate Inventory of areas with sterilization/disinfection processes. • Be cautious of Glutaraldehyde!

  12. Cidex vs. Cidex OPA • Cidex (active ingredient glutaraldehyde) • Cidex OPA (active ingredient ortho-Phthalaldehyde) • Strong recommendation for Cidex OPA…no environmental controls, no employee exposure concern, destroys micobacterium TB in 12 minutes.

  13. What now? • FDA directed recall of all Baxter Colleague Infusion Pumps in US. • Estimated over 200,000 in use. • Recall directed due to “long standing failure” to correct problems with pumps.

  14. Internal Nosocomial exposures:Isoflex Mattresses • Isoflex mattress investigation. • Physical plant employee identifies moisture and possible mold growth on bottom of mattress.

  15. Mattress cont… • No known patient health effects at time of investigation. • Investigation involved representative sample of mattresses from several facilities. 156 mattresses were inspected.

  16. Mattresses cont… • Results…..47 affected! • Cladosporium and aureobasidium primary molds identified. (Cosmopolitan and bathroom molds). • Moisture source determined to be moisture vapor condensation. Patient was determined to be source.

  17. Mattresses cont… • Conclusions: • Moisture staining most prevalent issue limited evidence of mold growth. • Action: new cleaning, laundering (mattress sock), applications of fungicide and monitoring plan to include removal of mattresses.

  18. What is Polidocanol? • Remember what you need to know but are afraid to ask!!

  19. Polidocanol • Considered by many Physicians to be the safest most effective sclerosing agent with the least side effects. • The drug was not FDA approved. So…now we’re thinking Off Label, informed consent right?

  20. Polidocanol • Problems: • Drug is no longer manufactured in the U.S. • Physicians are importing drug to personal residences or Offices. • Importation of non FDA approved drugs is illegal. • Administration of imported non FDA approved drug to Medicare patients is Federal Crime.

  21. Polidocanol Alert • FDA approves: Asclera (Polidocanol Injection) Summer, 2010 • First sclerosant to be approved in 60 years!

  22. Radiation Safety • Understanding the Computed Tomography controversy!

  23. Computed Tomography • Estimated CT’s account for 6,000 additional cancers per year • Rapid increase in use of CT Scanning • Crisis in Education and understanding of Risk for Patients and Physicians

  24. Computed Tomography • CT’s deliver a much higher dose than common x-rays. • National Academy of Sciences (government advisor) estimates a typical CT exam incurs risk of 1 in 1,000 for causing cancer with 50% mortality rate.

  25. Recent Study at U.S. teaching hospital (Lee et.al) • 74% of referring ED Physicians and 74% of radiologists underestimated CT’s radiation dose. • 92% of patients given a CT in the ED thought the radiation dose was similar to or at most 10 times that of a regular x-ray. • What’s the answer?

  26. Answer: • A typical CT exam delivers a radiation dose between 100 and 400 times that of a single chest x-ray! • CT’s simply present higher risks to patients than wrong site surgery or surgical burns. • Joint Commission Sentinel Event: “Radiation therapy resulting in 25% greater dose than anticipated. • Media attention, American College of Radiology, FDA

  27. What are the regulatory limits for patient doses? • The NRC sets a regulatory limit for annual occupational exposure to radiation. However, there are no regulatory limits for patients receiving doses from medical procedures. • Medical Practitioners are responsible for keeping doses as low as reasonably possible. • Special risk for pediatric patients

  28. What can we do: • Understand doses. Displayed values on scanners is the Dose Length Product (scan preparation and calibration). • This is not the effective dose. (age, body dimensions etc.)

  29. Typical Doses • Head CT: 75 mGy • Ab CT: 30 mGy • Ped Ab: 20 mGy • Chest CT: 25 mGy • Brain Perfusion: CT: <500 mGy • Anything above 500 mGy is very, very high!

  30. Additional Risk Considerations: • Ensure technologists are trained to understand references doses for typical exams. • Must be empowered to question doses or patient concerns (more than one CT recently?)

  31. CT Continued • Have CT’s been evaluated by Health Physicist? Meet them. • Consider QI Project: • Are doses on scanners? • Laminated Cards?

  32. Additional Risk Considerations: • Consider accreditation (ACR) • Encourage physicians to ask, “what other diagnostic tool is available?” before scheduling routine CT exams.

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