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CLER Overview. Graduate Medical Education Committee April 1, 2013. What is CLER?. C linical L earning E nvironment R eview Component of ACGME’s Next Accreditation System (NAS) . Focus on educational/working environment, not accreditation requirements.
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CLER Overview Graduate Medical Education Committee April 1, 2013
What is CLER? • Clinical Learning Environment Review • Component of ACGME’s Next Accreditation System (NAS). • Focus on educational/working environment, not accreditation requirements. • Review conducted where residents receive their clinical training. • Purpose is to ensure that those settings promote quality care and prepare residents to practice safely.
CLER’s Six Focus Areas • Patient Safety • Do residents report patient safety issues ? (errors, unsafe conditions, near misses) • Do residents participate in inter-professional teams to promote patient safety? • Quality Improvement • Are GME leadership, faculty, and residents integrated into the hospital’s quality improvement activities? • Do residents learn how to identify opportunities for reducing health care disparities? • Do residents use data to improve systems of care?
CLER’s Six Focus Areas • Transitions of Care • Is there effective standardization and oversight? • Does the hospital facilitate professional development for residents and faculty about transitions of care? • Supervision • Does the institution establish and monitor policies for effective supervision of residents? • Do all residents have protected mechanisms to report inadequate supervision? Do/would they use them?
CLER’s Six Focus Areas • Duty hours, fatigue management & mitigation • Are faculty and residents educated about fatigue? • Is there institutional oversight and monitoring of duty hours across all programs? • Professionalism • Do we educate/monitor behavior of residents & faculty? • Is there “veracity in scholarly pursuits?” • Is reporting of program information to the ACGME accurate? • Do residents report their duty hours accurately?
CLER Visits • Every 18 months, for 2-5 days (expect 2-3 days). • 10 days to 3 weeks advance notice, any time after January 1, 2013. • We will have a CLER visit before February 2014. • Hospital leadership will be asked to describe our performance in the six focus areas. • Interview meetings and walking tours of clinical areas. • First CLER visit will be to University of Utah Hospital only. • Results of first visits are baseline and will not be used in making accreditation decisions.
How CLER visit is conducted • NOTIFICATION • DIO contacted 10 – 21 days ahead of visit. • DIO requested to provide documents 1 week prior to visit: • Organizational charts, select committee rosters • Organizational strategies for patient safety & healthcare quality • Policies on supervision, transitions in care, duty hours • WHO ARE THE SURVEYORS? • Team of 2-6 visitors. • One volunteer from another institution • One or more ACGME professionals • Size and membership of team based on size and complexity of Sponsoring Institution
How CLER visit is conducted • Walking tours of clinical areas, conducted by chief residents. • Talk with nurses • Talk with other residents and physicians on units • Possible patient contact • May ask people encountered about their perspective of residents related to the six focus topics • Team members have returned in the evening. • Team provides exit conference to hospital and GME leaders.
Who is interviewed? • CEO • Participation by the CEO in the opening and closing conferences (at minimum) is essential. • Other Hospital Leaders • CMO, CNO, CHQO • GME Leadership • DIO, GME office staff, GMEC Chair, GMEC resident members. • GME Programs • Program Directors, core faculty, peer-selected residents from all core programs and larger fellowships.
Key Questions • What organizational structures and administrative and clinical processes does the hospital have in place to support GME learning in each of the six focus areas? • How integrated is the GME leadership and faculty in the current clinical learning environment? • What is the role of GME leadership and faculty to support resident and fellow learning in each of the six focus areas? • How engaged are the residents and fellows? • How does the hospital determine the success of its efforts to integrate GME into the quality infrastructure? • What areas have the hospital identified as opportunities for improvement?
What could they ask? • Do residents know how to report an adverse event or potential safety concern? • Do our residents file reports of safety concerns—or do they leave it to the nursing staff? • If a resident reports a concern, does he/she get feedback about what action was taken? • Do residents know the hospital’s quality goals? • Do residents know how their individual QI and patient safety projects relate to the hospital’s overall plan? Do the faculty members? GME committee?
What are we doing now? • Patient Safety, Quality Improvement, Transitions, Supervision, Duty Hours/Fatigue Management, Professionalism: • Follow up with programs on resident concerns raised in annual ACGME and GME Office resident/fellow surveys. • Follow up with programs on issues raised in Internal Reviews. • Address issues in annual program director retreats and monthly program coordinator training sessions. • Require programs with problems to report progress regularly (usually 6 month intervals) to the GME Committee. • Ensure that program directors are current in their knowledge of ACGME requirements.
What else are we doing now? • Duty Hours, Fatigue Management and Mitigation • Monitor duty hours in E*Value system; provide quarterly reports to GMEC; request action plans from problem programs. • Mandatory work hours/fatigue mitigation session for residents at orientation. • SAFER Sleep Deprivation module on GME website.
Where do we need to do more? • Quality Improvement and Patient Safety • Educate faculty and residents In quality improvement and patient safety. • Involve GME leadership, faculty and residents in hospital’s quality and patient safety activities (committees, inter-professional teams, RCAs, etc.). • Form resident quality group. • Form GMEC patient safety and quality subcommittee. • Dedicate Quality Department analyst for GME to track residents’ projects & ensure integration with hospital’s quality system. • Transitions of Care • Complete development and implement uniform transition of care form for the EPIC EMR (Mike Strong, MD).
Where do we need to do more? • Duty Hours, Fatigue Management • Educate Faculty in fatigue management and mitigation. • Professionalism • Develop education and systems to monitor fulfillment of professional responsibilities, including scholarly pursuits, accurate and honest reporting of duty hours by residents/fellowsand identification of resident mistreatment.
What should we do NOW? • Form a CLER Working Group. • Brief Hospital leadership, GMEC, faculty and residents. • Ensure GMEC and program policies (e.g., supervision, duty hours, transitions of care, fatigue management) and Organizational Charts are up to date. • Begin faculty and resident education in quality improvement and patient safety (e.g. IHI Open School courses). • Develop orientation for nurses and other staff. • Develop tracking systems for actions in each of the six focus areas.
Some practical issues • Short notice scheduling • Availability of CEO & other senior leaders • Peer-selection of residents/fellows • Meeting rooms • Multiple meetings of up to 35 persons • Screen or clean wall for projection • Short notice room reservations • Walk-arounds • HIPAA/BAA agreements (ours are current) • ID badges for visitors • Chief resident escorts • Nursing and other staff preparation (CNO)
Early Impressions from CLER Visits* • Transitions of Care • Primary focus on hand-off for change of duty • Variability in process and oversight of resident hand-offs • Supervision • Examples of both under and over supervision • Knowledge of need for direct supervision appears to be limited to GME faculty * R. Wagner. ACGME Annual Education Conference, Session 062, March 2, 2013
Early Impressions from CLER Visits* • Duty Hours/Fatigue Management • Consistent emphasis on education; variable evidence of effective management strategies • Professionalism • Most residents report being in a culture of openness for bringing forth concerns regarding honesty in reporting • Variable monitoring by participating sites * R. Wagner. ACGME Annual Education Conference, Session 062, March 2, 2013
Early Impressions from CLER Visits* • Leadership • Significant variability in: • Programs working together on inter-program or common-program solutions • Programs working together on institutionally-directed solutions • Participating site’s leadership view of the strategic value of GME in advancing patient safety and care improvement • Participating site’s leadership view of the strategic role of GME in advancing patient safety and care improvement * R. Wagner. ACGME Annual Education Conference, Session 062, March 2, 2013
For additional information: www.acgme-nas.org