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Working with Management on Issues of Patient Safety. Ohio Nurses Association Convention 11 October 2013 Katherine A. Kany, MSN, BS, RN Assistant Director/AFT Healthcare . Forces Compelling Collaboration. Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) Medicare reimbursement changes
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Working with Management on Issues of Patient Safety. Ohio Nurses Association Convention 11 October 2013 Katherine A. Kany, MSN, BS, RN Assistant Director/AFT Healthcare
Forces Compelling Collaboration • Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) • Medicare reimbursement changes • Satisfaction as a proxy for quality • Population demographics • Survival in the marketplace • Cost of poor decision-making
Creating Joint Projects to Address Safety & Quality • Patient safety & quality of care are the driving forces for the ACA and receive high priority in federal grant funding: AHRQ, HRSA, CMS, philanthropic orgs. • Data on hospital performance can be found at www.medicare.gov/hospitalcompare • Using existing contract provisions and committees as opportunities for joint initiatives.
Why Your Expert Input is Critical • Responsibility to patients and their families • Working at the intersection of decision-making and care-delivery • Exquisite predictive ability to anticipate what will and won’t work • Rapid assessment, feedback, and readjustment capacity • Opportunity for professional recognition
Emerging Model for Labor-Management Partnerships • The focus is on achieving excellence in the quality, safety and cost of patient care, not just better relations. • Improvement efforts directly support the organization’s overall strategy and performance objectives. • Joint efforts need to involve physician leadership, not just management and unionized staff. • Change starts at the point of care, not at the top of the organization.
Determining the Work • (Jointly) identify the issue and get buy-in from the top of the organization. • Use data to support the gravity of the issue—and at every other point along the way. • Keep the project manageable (unit-level)and “doable” (win/win). • Think about all the “players” who touch the issue you have identified. • Avoid after-hours meetings and fold this priority into day-to-day business.
Safety & Quality in Your Facility • What problem(s) do you see on your unit? • How well is your facility doing compared to others? Data on hospital performance can be found at www.medicare.gov/hospitalcompare • How do these problems relate to the safety & quality of care delivery? • How aware are unit and hospital managers? • How much of a reduction in reimbursement is your facility experiencing as a result? You can see how well your facility is doing at this site:www.ahd.com
Developing the Process • Utilize existing committees wherever possible and supplement staff as needed. • Give the project team support, data, resources and any training they identify as necessary. • Toss out all presumptions of the causes of, and solutions for, problems. • Invite perspective beyond the team; share updates and results with all unit staff. • Share information and results across units, departments
Case Study: Press Ganey Nightmares • Dismal patient and staff satisfaction scores in small community hospital. • Millions spent in failed QI programs. • Public humiliation of staff named by patients in surveys. • Living in the shadow of two major competitors. • La voila’: management turns to labor for help. • Project identified, “worked,” and resolved after three months.
What Project Can you Propose? • Do you have a supportive unit manager? • Do you have an existing committee through which the work can be done? • Which personnel and departments would you involve? • How would you measure success? • Would the project require funding? • Do you need expert assistance?
References • Fleischut, P. M., Faggiani, S. L., Evans, A. S., Brenner, S., Liebowitz, R. S., Forese, L., & ... Lazar, E. J. (2012). The Effect of a Novel Housestaff Quality Council on Quality and Patient Safety. Joint Commission Journal On Quality & Patient Safety, 38(7), 311-317. • Dearmon, V., Roussel, L., Buckner, E. B., Mulekar, M., Pomrenke, B., Salas, S., & ... Brown, A. (2013). Transforming Care at the Bedside (TCAB): Enhancing Direct Care and Value-added Care. Journal Of Nursing Management, 21(4), 668-678.
Resources for Funding • Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality (AHRQ): http://www.ahrq.gov/funding/index.htm • Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Innovation Center: http://innovation.cms.gov/initiatives/Health-Care-Innovation-Awards/Round-2.html • Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA): http://www.hrsa.gov/grants/apply/assistance/pcmh/