1 / 38

Review of the Douglas Inquiry into King Edward Memorial Hospital Perth, WA. Dec 2001

Review of the Douglas Inquiry into King Edward Memorial Hospital Perth, WA. Dec 2001 A Presentation to The Health Roundtable by Dr Michael Walsh, Chief Executive, Bayside Health 7 August 2002. Overview of Discussion. Background to Inquiry Summary of Findings

cai
Download Presentation

Review of the Douglas Inquiry into King Edward Memorial Hospital Perth, WA. Dec 2001

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Review of the Douglas Inquiry into King Edward Memorial Hospital Perth, WA. Dec 2001 A Presentation to The Health Roundtable by Dr Michael Walsh, Chief Executive, Bayside Health 7 August 2002

  2. Overview of Discussion • Background to Inquiry • Summary of Findings • Lessons for Health Care Institutions: • operational/clinical management • governance • Lessons for: • System and Policy-makers • Health Roundtable hospitals

  3. King Edward Profile • WA’s only tertiary referral services for obstetrics and gynaecology • 250 inpatient beds, neonatal intensive care, outpatients and specialist emergency services • 5,000 births per year • 5,000 gynaecology operations • 8,000-10,000 emergency presentations • High and increasing case complexity

  4. Lead-up to Inquiry • Organisational, Governance Change • merger with children’s hospital (1993) • two new chief executives • devolved management (1996) • Reviews, Reviews, Reviews: • review WA O&G (1990,1998) • Chief executive “whistleblowing” • review by retired clinician (1999) • Child and Glover review (1999) • Strong public debate about future of KEMH • Four Corners • The West Australian

  5. METHODOLOGY

  6. Inquiry’s Brief • Established under Hospitals and Health Services Act • Examine management and clinical practices, policies and processes from 1990 to 2000 • Focus to “identify and assess the deficiencies” (1) • Recommend changes to improve short-comings 1.Executive Summary, Inquiry into KEMH 1990 to 2000, Final Report, Vol.1, November 2001

  7. Inquiries Scope • Extended over 18 Months • Accessed information from 1600 patient files • Analysed 605 patient files • Analysed ninety-six medico-legal cases • Compared KEMH clinical performance data with 13 similar Australian services (Consortium) • Reviewed 293 written submissions • Interviewed 70 former KEMH patients • Read 106 transcripts, reports & other documents • Resource intensive (expensive)

  8. Clinical File Review • Consultant Panel • Case Selection • cases at increased risk of poor outcomes • Focus of Review • clinician knowledge, skill, experience, documentation, care planning • Safety and Clinical Error Rating • failure to recognise serious, unstable situation • failure by senior staff to assess

  9. Clinical File Review • Contributing factors • delay in providing care • lack of adequate policy/practice guidelines • lack of adequate supervision and support • Protective Factors • adequate staffing levels/skill mix • evidence-based clinical policies • written care plans • access to senior clinical staff

  10. Consortium Benchmarking • Comparative analysis of perinatal, obstetric and gynaecological information • KEMH Casemix • high proportion of women <20 years • more indigenous women • 1.7 times as many premature and low birth weight live births

  11. FINDINGS

  12. Strengths of KEMH • Many examples of exemplary care & service • Concerted effort by some to address or improve long-standing problems

  13. Management Management failed to: • make & act on important decisions • create an open, transparent, positive culture • monitor & improve safety & quality • clarify accountability, responsibility & reporting • ensure staff were properly trained & supervised • address serious clinical issues adversely affecting care & clinical outcomes

  14. CASE: Credentialling • No formal credentialling process to June 2000 • Subject raised often as a serious issue since 1991 • “We just have a feel for these people” (junior doctors) • ACHS recommendations on credentialling in 1991 and 1994 • Many discussions, many recommendations, no action • Credentialling list was to be drawn up in 1995 - published 1997 and never updated • Cases of clinicians scheduled to operate with no privileges -Director would give approval by phone to theatre staff • New Credentialling Committee met Aug 2000, endorsed credentialling application form in September; no reference in TOR to junior doctor credentialling • Failed to meet again until March 2001

  15. Senior Doctors • Insufficient involvement in complex cases • Inadequate, delayed or absent decisions • Inadequate credentialing, appointment, re-appointment, admitting privileges processes • Inadequate performance management • Inadequate supervision/training of juniors • Failed to provide timely, detailed analysis of staffing needs

  16. Junior Doctors • Left to do much of the complex work • Unreasonably burdened with difficult cases • Inadequately supervised/supported • Requests for help often delayed or ignored • Blamed for errors - “sink or swim” • Inadequate orientation & training • Supported more by midwives than senior doctors

  17. CASE: Cardiotocography • Papers and reviews emphasized importance of CTG training • Misinterpretation/incorrect action in 51 of 372 high-risk cases • Numerous adverse events over many years • Many discussions, many recommendations, no action • Problems with CTG training for junior doctors: • infrequent, ad hoc, non-compulsory • senior doctors unavailable to train juniors • no registry of attendance • no skills assessment • inconsistent with midwifery training in CTG • no linkage with 2001 credentialling program • No mandatory training at July 2001

  18. Clinical Practice Ineffective or absent: • care planning, coordination, documentation • policies & practicesbased on best evidence Poor management of: • complex & emergency cases • women needing intensive care services • incidents& adverse events Poor clinical & emotional outcomes for women & families

  19. CASE: Ectopic Pregnancy • Ruptured ectopic pregnancies from 1995-2000 • ED Residents managed potential ectopic pregnancies • Often no review by a senior clinician • No clinical management policy or guideline - ongoing • Slow ectopic pregnancy testing and delays of up to 3 days for results review - some ruptured • Outdated clinical management 1998 - laparotomies • Registrars and residents sent numerous memos - no policy • Draft policy 1999 - never endorsed • Problem considered too complex to overcome • Litigation for ruptured ectopic April 2000- still no policy or guideline

  20. CASE: Bladder Care • Cases post-epidural bladder dysfunction • Policy took 2 years to develop • Inhibitors: ad hoc formulation process; desire for consensus • Numerous emails, numerous drafts; numerous delays • No reference to best available evidence • No evidence of literature review • No clinical trials

  21. Clinical Review & Reporting Inconsistencies in: • review and report of deaths to the Coroner • report, review and response to incidents & adverse events • management of complaints and medico-legal cases • review & compare clinical performance & respond to performance issues

  22. Clinical File Review; Obstetrics • Of 372 high risk cases, 47% at least one clinical error. Of these, 57% very serious clinical error • Error free care • consultants 72% cases, Snr Reg 66%, Level 3/4 Reg 60%, Level 1/2 Reg 36%, residents 24%, Midwives 40% • Staff at Crucial Times • 71% errors outside business hours • Consultants involved at crucial times 21% cases; midwives and Level 3/4 Regs same

  23. Consortium Benchmarking • Obstetric and Perinatal Outcomes • high proportion of pre-term births • excess stillbirths • high rates induced labour • high rates 3rd and 4th degree peri. Tears • Gynaecology Outcomes • relatively high number of post-op deaths • relatively high number of post-op transfers to adult special care

  24. Internal Policies and Processes Absent or inadequate: • quality improvement program • incident/adverse event monitoring & follow-up • complaints & medico-legal case management • committee functioning & review • policy development, deployment, review • recruitment, employment, performance management, training

  25. Policy Compliance Issue • Inquiry found many examples of non-compliance • cord blood pH testing • Oxytocin policy • unnecessary CTGs for low-risk patients • Prostaglandin E2gel • Residents signing consent form

  26. Policy Compliance Monitoring Issue • No distinction between mandatory & discretionary • 1997 ACHS review gave “moderate achievement” • Monitoring methods: • “we rely on peer pressure” • midwives as “watchdogs” • “I tell them not to” (non-compliance with handbook) • memos in pigeon-holes • follow-up if problem arose • Reasons for not auditing compliance: • handbook content not meant to be strict rules • guidelines “meant to be interpreted intelligently” • no database; requires manual chart review • Responsibility:in Unit Medical Director’s job description

  27. Women & Families • Often excluded from decisions about care • Concerns ignored or overlooked • Treated poorly as complainants • Given untimely and inadequate information, particularly when things went wrong • Rarely involved in policy decisions

  28. COMPARISONS

  29. Bristol Royal Infirmary • Heart surgery on babies in Britain’s Bristol Infirmary from 1988 to 1994 • Deaths following arterial switch operation • Excessive time take to do procedure • Concerns raised repeatedly by an anaesthetist (whistleblower) • Senior doctors and chief executive eventually faced prosecution

  30. Common Themes In both cases, management’s failed to: • respond to important issues raised repeatedly • ensure clinicians were properly trained • build a culture of transparency/open disclosure • establish effective quality systems • give patients & families adequate information about risks, care & problems with care • effectively manage complaints/medico-legal cases

  31. LESSONS

  32. Clinical governance 1. Leadership & Culture 2. Accountability & Responsibility 3. Safety & Quality Systems 4. Staff Support & Development 5. Concern for Consumer & Families

  33. Health Service Issues Institutional Governance • Role of Board, Management in Patient Safety • Importance of Benchmarking and Comparative Data • Importance of Incident Monitoring, Reporting, Management and Review • Importance of Mortality Review • Importance of Periodic External Review of Management Policies, Procedures and Practices

  34. System Issues System Governance • Role of Regulatory/Statutory Authorities • Mortality Committees; • Coroner • Role and Function of External Accreditation • Standards of practice (incl credentialling) • Role and Structure of “Special Inquiries” • Importance of Comparative Data • voluntary versus mandatory • clinical privilege (Immunity) • public disclosure

  35. CONCLUSIONS

  36. The Douglas Inquiry • landmark in the evolution of health care safety and quality policy and practice in Australian hospitals; • ACS&QHC Summary and Implications document should be required reading for all hospital managers and Boards • We should learn from the Inquiry findings and limitations to develop better ways of monitoring and reporting safe patient care environments.

  37. What Does it Mean for HRT Members? • To what extent do Douglas findings apply to us? • Management, Board leadership and decision-making? • Senior and Junior relationships, workload and credentialling • recruitment, appointment, performance management • safety and quality protection systems • attitudes to patients and families, complainants

  38. What Should We Do About It? • System Responses • Australian Health Ministers • National Safety and Quality Council • Victorian Quality Council • Health Roundtable CEOs • Review of the Role of the Board • Self Assessment • Awareness-raising • Managers • Defining the role of managers, staff • Self Assessment • awareness and education

More Related