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NH Patient Safety Culture Survey (AHRQ) Beth Hercher, QI Specialist Barbara Meadows, QI Specialist Patient Safety Team October 2009 Patient Safety Restraint Collaborative Learning Session 3. CMS Vision Statement for the National Healthcare Quality Improvement Program. “The right care
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NH Patient Safety Culture Survey (AHRQ)Beth Hercher, QI SpecialistBarbara Meadows, QI SpecialistPatient Safety TeamOctober 2009Patient Safety Restraint CollaborativeLearning Session 3
CMS Vision Statement for the National Healthcare Quality Improvement Program “The right care for every person,every time.”
Safe Timely Effective Efficient Equitable Patient-centered The Institute of Medicine The “Right Care”
April 2009 Learning Session 2 • Final formatted survey • Survey User’s Guide providing instruction on data collection and analysis • Microsoft Excel data entry and analysis tool
May-June 2009 surveys conducted July 31, 2009 individual data analysis tools submitted back to QSource October 2009 presentation of aggregate data analysis Timeline
Safety Culture Definition • The safety culture of an organization is the product of individual and group values, attitudes, perceptions, competencies, and patterns of behavior that determine the commitment to an organization’s health and safety management.
Nursing Home Survey onPatient Safety Culture (NH SOPS) • Developed by Agency for HealthcareResearch and Quality (AHRQ) • Designed specifically for nursing home staff • Asks for their opinions about the culture of patient safety in nursing homes
What the Survey Is Used for: • Assess patient safety culture • Develop interventions to raise staff awareness for patient safety issues • Evaluate the impact of patient safety improvement initiatives • Track changes in patient safety culture over time
NH Patient SafetyCulture Dimensions • 42 Items assess the following 12 dimensionsof patient safety culture: • Communication openness • Compliance with procedures • Feedback and communication aboutincidents • Handoffs • Management support for resident safety • Nonpunitive response to mistakes
NH Patient SafetyCulture Dimensions, cont. • Organizational learning – continuous improvement 8. Overall perceptions of resident safety 9. Staffing 10. Supervisor/Manager expectations and actions promoting resident safety 11. Teamwork 12. Training and skills
NH SOPSData Entry and Analysis Tool • Westat has designed a data entry and analysis tool to display results from the new nursing home survey • Input individual survey data • Create graphs and tables to display your survey results overall and by various demographics • Analyze which patient safety culture dimensions may need additional attention • Share the results with others in your organization. All results are printable.
AHRQ Survey Designed to Measure • 1) Two overall patient safety outcomes • a. Nursing Home Recommendation • b. Rating on Resident Safety • 2) Twelve dimensions of culture related to patient safety
Composite Level Results Comparative results are based on 40 pilot nursing homes
Composite results measure the12 different domains of patient safety Calculated by averaging the percent positive responses of the items within the domain Positive response is the percent of responses that were rated a 4 or 5 (agree/strongly agree) Definition of Composite Results
Composite score tells you the average percentage of people who responded positively to the survey items Summarize overall how positively people answered the items in each safety culture dimension Definition of Composite Results, cont.
36 IPG facilities conducted survey Top three opportunities: Staffing Nonpunitive response to mistakes Communication openness Baseline Survey
AHRQ Patient Safety Culture Survey: Composite-Level Comparative Results
JCAHO Sentinel Events Targets for Teamwork
Administrative and clinical leadership commitment to quality and safety Data for learning, not judgment Organization-wide, systematic approachesto improvement Culture change/teamwork Conduct informal “RCA” ASK frontline staff and feed back data regularly What You Need to Succeed
Strategies and Tools to Enhance Performance and Patient Safety
Effective Team Members • Are better able to predict the needs of other team members • Provide quality information and feedback • Engage in higher level decision-making • Manage conflict skillfully • Understand their roles and responsibilities • Reduce stress on the team as a whole through better performance “Achieve a mutual goal through interdependent and adaptive actions”
TeamSTEPPS: • Developed by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and the Department of Defense • Purpose: To enhance performance andpatient safety
Teamwork Exercise • Divide up into your facility teams • Decide who will be your team leader
TeamSTEPPS Emphasis: • Teamwork and communication • Communication and teamwork skills are essential to providing quality care and preventing medical errors
Huddle Problem solving • Hold ad hoc, “touch-base” meetings to regain situation awareness • Discuss critical issues and emerging events • Anticipate outcomes and likely contingencies • Assign resources • Express concerns
Debrief Process Improvement • Brief, informal information exchange and feedback sessions • Occur after an event or shift • Designed to improve teamwork skills • Designed to improve outcomes • An accurate reconstruction of key events • Analysis of why the event occurred • What should be done differently next time
Scenario Part 1 Mrs. Smith, at 70 yrs old, fell while walking her dog. Following the surgery to repair the hip fracture, it is determined that she will require rehabilitation in the nursing home. The family lives out of state. What TeamSTEPPS tool would be effective here?
5 days later….. While assisting Mrs. Smith, Annie, the new C.N.A., notices a reddened area on the coccyx. She understands from her recent team training that this could be a problem if she doesn’t inform the team. Using TeamSTEPPS tools, what is Annie’s next step?
What occurs next is crucial…. The team lead has had several shift problems and is running late. Though she hears Annie’s report, she states “We’ll just leave it for the next shift, get Mrs. Smith dressed and down to the activities room.” What tool does Annie need?
When Communication is Crucial • When the patient has had achange in condition • When there has been a change in thePlan of Care • When reporting off at shift change • Upon being assigned a new patient
Streamlining Communication • Effective communication is: • Complete • Clear • Brief • Timely
SBAR Prep • Situation – the punch line in 5-10 seconds • Background – the context, objective data, how did we get here • Assessment – what is the problem ? • Recommendation – what do we need to do ?
Excercise SBAR
Next step…reporting out The team lead recognized Annie’s concerns; they agree to go to the room together and check the reddened area. The area is deep red, 6cm and the resident reports pain on assessment. What TeamSTEPPS tool would help the team lead in her communication to the physician?
Next Steps May-June 2010 Re-administer paper survey tool Response feedback entered into data analysis tool July 31, 2010 Data analysis tool submitted to QSource
Thank You! NH Patient Safety Culture Team Contacts: Beth Hercher, ext. 2640 Barbara Meadows, ext. 7202 1.800.528.2655 This presentation and related materials were developed by QSource, the Medicare Quality Improvement Organization for Tennessee, under contract with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), a division of the Department of Health and Human Services. Contents do not necessarily reflect CMS policy. QSOURCE-TN-109.62-2008-16