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10/30/07   |   By

AHRQ Announces 10 Patient Safety Tips for Hospitals | DC Metro Area Medical Malpractice Law Blog

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The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), recently issued a 10-item advisory for hospitals and healthcare facilities designed to improve patient safety and reduce medical errors.  Though AHRQ primarily supports research designed to assist health administrators and medical personnel, this knowledge of best practices in patient safety can also benefit the public by enabling patients and their families to advocate for safer medical care.  Following are the 10 recommendations, re-posted in their entirety:

  1. Assess and improve your patient safety culture. Survey staff in individual units and throughout the hospital to improve the culture of patient safety, as noted in the 1999 Institute of Medicine report, To Err is Human. Surveys are available, including AHRQ’s free Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture and its accompanying toolkit materials, designed to provide basic knowledge and tools for action.
  2. Build teamwork. Train hospital staff to communicate effectively as a team. A free, customizable toolkit (called TeamSTEPPS), developed by AHRQ and the Department of Defense, provides evidence-based training techniques for effective communication and other teamwork skills. TeamSTEPPS can be tailored to any health care setting, from emergency departments to ambulatory clinics.
  3. Limit shifts for hospital staff, if possible. Consider options to minimize shifts of more than 16 consecutive hours by residents, interns, and nurses working in hospitals. The rate of serious medical errors at two Boston hospital intensive care units (ICUs), by first-year interns, dropped by 36 percent when 30-hour-in-a-row work shifts were eliminated. Motor vehicle accidents and needle stick injuries, by sleep-deprived interns, also decreased with shorter shifts.
  4. Insert chest tubes safely. Universal Precautions (achieved by using sterile cap, mask, gown, and gloves); Wider skin prep; Extensive draping; and Tray positioning (UWET, an easy-to-remember mnemonic) should be used when inserting chest tubes, as per a universal protocol from the Joint Commission. A free 11-minute DVD from AHRQ provides video excerpts of 50 actual chest tube insertion procedures to illustrate problems that can occur (http://www.ahrq.gov/qual/chesttubes.htm).
  5. Prevent central line-related bloodstream infections. Being vigilant and using five evidence-based procedures—including hand washing, using full-barrier precautions during the insertion of central venous catheters, cleaning the skin with chlorhexidine, avoiding the femoral site, and removing unnecessary catheters—reduced deadly infections to zero in a study at more than 100 large and small hospitals.
  6. Make good use of senior ICU nurses. Use Registered Nurses and maintain appropriate round-the-clock staffing levels in intensive care units (ICUs) to prevent airway tube complications. Adults and children had fewer airway events during daytime hours (7:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.), and their negative impact was limited by skilled assistants, backup, and cross-coverage in ICUs.
  7. Use reliable decision-support tools at the point of care. Ensure that computerized physician order entry or personal digital assistant-based drug information is readily available at the point of prescribing or ordering. For example, RxPro, ePocrates, Lexi-Drugs, and mobileMicromedex met AHRQ’s quality and safety criteria by reducing potential errors associated with insufficient or incomplete drug information.
  8. Set up a safety reporting system. Watch a video that explains how to implement a Web-based reporting system in the ICU to help eliminate system failures that lead to errors in health care (http://safetyresearch.jhu.edu/QSR/Research/Projects/project_ICUSRS.asp). Compare near-misses to adverse events and examine provider’s perceptions of reporting systems.
  9. Limit urinary catheter use to 3 days. Assess catheter use early and use computer-based reminders to alert clinicians to remove catheters as soon as possible to reduce the risk of urinary tract infections (UTIs). A computer-based order entry system prompting catheter removal after 72 hours decreases the duration of urinary catheterization by about one-third, or 3 days, and reduces UTIs.
  10. Minimize unnecessary interruptions. Reduce distractions faced by the nursing staff, especially during critical times such as shift changes. Encourage staff to speak up when necessary, but create a ‘zone of silence’ near medication preparation carts and other areas where concentration is essential.”

Previously on the DC Metro Area Medical Malpractice Law Blog, we have posted articles related to:

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