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  #1  
Old 6th August 2004, 01:55 AM
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I Say... Quality in the Health Care Industry

Recently, one of our stalwart Covers wrote a post
Quote:
Originally Posted by RosieA

Steel, I think you'd be a great Ombudsman, and the Nursing Home world really needs the oversight. My 90 year old mother was in one for 6 weeks a few years back, doing rehab on a fractured knee. The stuff that happened in 6 weeks made both if us have a horror of her ever having to go back. I'm quite sure that she'd commit suicide before she ever went back.
It seems to me every day I read another scary story about health care "glitches" throughout the world. Just today there were stories about problems in Canada
Quote:
Infection Kills 100 Quebec Patients
Aug 5, 1:28 AM (ET)
TORONTO (AP) - A bacterial infection commonly found in hospitals and nursing homes has been blamed in the deaths of 100 patients in the past 18 months in a single Quebec hospital, an infectious disease expert at the facility said on Wednesday.


Dr. Jacques Pepin said cases of Clostridium difficile at University Hospital in Sherbrooke, about 90 miles east of Montreal, have been steadily increasing.

Pepin has called for government action to prevent more outbreaks. The bacteria can cause diarrhea and colon inflammation, and often occurs after a patient has taken antibiotics. Outbreaks of C. difficile have killed almost 90 patients at several other hospitals in Montreal and Calgary, Alberta. And more recently, a patient died of the disease in a hospital in Newmarket, just north of Toronto.

Last week, I read
Quote:
Study: Hospital errors cause 195,000 deaths
Report doubles earlier Institute of Medicine estimate
Wednesday, July 28, 2004 Posted: 10:08 AM EDT (1408 GMT)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- As many as 195,000 people a year could be dying in U.S. hospitals because of easily prevented errors, a company said Tuesday in an estimate that doubles previous figures.
Lakewood, Colorado-based HealthGrades Inc. said its data covers all 50 states and is more up-to-date than a 1999 study from the Institute of Medicine that said 98,000 people a year die from medical errors.
"The HealthGrades study shows that the IOM report may have underestimated the number of deaths due to medical errors, and, moreover, that there is little evidence that patient safety has improved in the last five years," said Dr. Samantha Collier, vice president of medical affairs at the company.
Over 30 years ago, there was a fantastic movie satire called
The Hospital
Madness, Murder and Malpractice.
Written By Paddy Chayefsky
Release Year 1971
George C. Scott as Dr. Herbert Herb Bock
Diana Rigg as Miss Barbara Drummond
Barnard Hughes as Edmund Drummond

which capitalized on how each small error could be compounded into an ultimate disaster. At the time, I thought it was a black comedy. Today, it seems to have been the blueprint for healthcare practice throughout the world.

So much for the preliminary setup.
The conditions for debate:
  • Please consider everything STRICTLY from a Quality Professional viewpoint.
  • Personal attacks on individuals or institutions are forbidden.
  • No personal anecdotes - only items from reputable news sources if any "horror stories" are deemed necessary to make a point.
  • No attacking other posters - if you object, use the report button (little triangle in upper right corner of each post) - let the Moderators sort it out
Now the questions for comment:
  1. Is the seeming crisis in healthcare quality real or merely a matter of perception?
  2. If not real, how should the healthcare industry correct the misperception?
  3. If real, what would be your guess as to root cause or common cause (that is, where would you start your investigation for root cause or common cause?)
  4. Since the situation seems to pervade both socialized and privatized medical systems, is it fair to eliminate the payment system from the primary consideration for cause?
  5. Is Deming right? Is this situation really a management responsibility, not employees?
  6. Finally, are there any public reports of Health Systems (single location or geographic region) where the situation is under control?
Remember, no political diatribes, let's just discuss this from a Quality viewpoint.
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Old 6th August 2004, 09:05 AM
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I'm wondering how this can be brought into context. For example, in looking at fatal auto accidents we can estimate total miles driven and come up with a relationship. I guess in medical it would be total patients treated.
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Old 6th August 2004, 09:16 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Marc

I'm wondering how this can be brought into context. For example, in looking at fatal auto accidents we can estimate total miles driven and come up with a relationship. I guess in medical it would be total patients treated.
Your question raises another point: severity of effect of errors (nonconformances.) Just as we would not equate surface scratches on an automobile paint job with a faulty fuel line connector which drips gasoline on a hot engine, then so, too, we would not equate a one hour wait for an X-ray because of misscheduling with leaving a surgical tool inside a person's body after an operation.

Good question. Good addition to the debate questions, especially #1 "perception."
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Old 6th August 2004, 09:55 AM
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Another factor would be limitations by specialty. Nursing home vs. emergency room vs. surgery (pre-op, during, and post-op) vs. general care ward (e.g.: diseases) vs. etc.
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Old 6th August 2004, 10:02 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Marc

Another factor would be limitations by specialty. Nursing home vs. emergency room vs. surgery (pre-op, during, and post-op) vs. general care ward (e.g.: diseases) vs. etc.
By Jove! I think you've caught the spirit of the debate!
By all means, let's categorize the issues. Ideas for a grid?
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Old 6th August 2004, 11:17 AM
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Now you're trying to make me think... Let's get some more replies.
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Old 6th August 2004, 03:20 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Marc

Now you're trying to make me think... Let's get some more replies.
Here's a sample of the kind of POSITIVE statements I hope our Covers can produce. This outlines some problems and reports/suggests tactics to ameliorate the problems
Quote:
Originally Posted by Drug Resource Center

http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH...l?d=dmtContent

Drug Resource Center
(medical content reviewed by the Faculty of the Harvard Medical School)

At The Hospital
Here are some safety tips to keep in mind when given medications at the hospital ...

There is perhaps no more vulnerable time in your life than when you are ill and hospitalized. Hospitals are alien environments to most people. They are busy, noisy place, populated by people who seem to speak a totally separate language. That is perhaps why the possibility of hospital errors is of such concern to the American public.

Most studies of hospital errors have shown that medication-related errors are the most frequent type. Although it is not obvious, the stepwise process from the time your health-care provider orders a particular medication to the time you receive it requires the actions of many people. This process must be perfect each time, despite the fact that it occurs thousands of times a day in the average hospital.

In 1995, a group of researchers from the Harvard Medical School and the Harvard School of Public Health published a study in the Journal of the American Medical Association highlighting the frequency of such errors, the types of errors committed and, more importantly, the causes of the errors. Contrary to popular opinion, medication errors are not caused by individuals but are caused by failures in what is a complex medication delivery system.

Fortunately, not all errors in medicine translate into a serious reaction or death, and many have little effect at all. Nonetheless, health-care providers, the hospital community and the government are dedicated to instituting systems to prevent and detect errors before they happen, similar to many other industries. Studies show that such measures, when instituted, can significantly reduce the numbers of hospital errors — sometimes by as much as 50 percent.

Here are some examples of how hospitals are working to reduce medication errors specifically:
New computers. Hospitals are installing computerized systems for all medication orders. Computerized ordering systems have been shown to dramatically reduce medication errors. These systems work by eliminating the risk caused by illegible handwriting on a prescription. They also provide your health-care provider with very important information at the exact time it can do the most good; for example, a computerized system can reminding your health-care provider that you have an allergy to a particular medication or that you have a medical condition that can affect the way a medication will work. Unfortunately, these computerized system are very expensive, and only a minority of hospitals actually use them.
More pharmacists. Hospitals are putting more pharmacists on the patient care units. These pharmacists work very closely with other health-care providers. Harvard researchers showed that by increasing the number of pharmacists involved in direct patient care and improving the communication between the pharmacist and other health-care providers, the number of medication errors can be reduced by more than 50 percent.
A review team. Having teams of health-care providers (physicians, nurses, pharmacists and others) examine every reported medication error can help prevent others from occurring. By using this system, hospitals concentrate on the real cause of errors and not on the people who make them. For example, when it was recognized that simple math errors could contribute to errors in administering medication intravenously, one hospital helped design special infusion pumps that tell the health-care provider when the dose of a medication being administered is too high.
What You Can Do
Patients play a very important role in reducing the number of medication errors in the hospital. There are several ways you can participate in making your hospitalization safer. Above all, be an informed and aware patient.
Carry a list of the medications you take. Include the name and number of your health-care provider, as well as your pharmacy. Also include your medication allergies on the list. Update your list each time you change your medications or doses. This list will be important, as you may be meeting many new health-care providers in the hospital.
Ask questions during your hospital stay. It is important that you know what test or procedure you're having and why, as well as what medications you are taking and why. This helps to avoid mistakes such as being given the wrong test or procedure or being given a medication that you have reacted to in the past. Don't assume that your health-care provider knows what is going on, especially when there are many health-care providers consulting on your case. If you didn't hear that you were supposed to have a test that you are scheduled for, ask your health-care provider why there was a change in plans.
Before you are discharged from the hospital, make sure you understand which new medications have been prescribed and which medications have been stopped. Also question why you need each new medication. Sometimes, medications given in the hospital, such as a stool softener or vitamins, are not really necessary when you are home and up and about.
If drug companies wanted to show some effort in this operation, perhaps they might consider offering patient kits to all doctors which include a wallet card for all medications and known allergies, drug interactions, etc. - the allergies part could even be a checklist. This would have greater value for doctor and patient than prescription pads, pens, and junkets to the Bahamas for "continuing education."

How about a similar kind of kit for all patients and "their responsible adults" when they enter hospital?

Anyone know of such kits or efforts by health care providers to supply them to patients?
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Old 6th August 2004, 03:51 PM
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Default Process Flow in Health Care Industry

Dear Wes:

Your posts today (and an earlier one yesterday on PPM Calculation for Bulk Materials) prompted to me prepare the attached flow chart for the Health Care Industry.

What happens when a patient comes to hospital or a health care facility? We can envision a simple four step process as indicated here. First, the patient is admitted. The patient may be healthy, entering the facility, or may be sick. The second step is diagnosis. This may prove to be either correct or incorrect. The next step is treatment. Again errors can occur in the administration of the treatment (wrong prescriptions are filled out, for example, or in extreme cases, as we have heard, the wrong leg is amputated, etc.). The fourth step is the outcome. Even if there is no errors in the diagnosis or treatment steps, the outcome may still not be the desirable one. Many factors affect this outcome (age of the patient for example, severity of the illness, lack of proper medication, etc.)

We could assign or arrive at a probability of the occurrence of an error for each step (by studying many cases where similar illnesses are being treated, with many different patient groups). The overall probability of the occurrence of a medical error would be the product of the probabilities at each step.

Thanks for initiating this thread. I have been interested in this problem but find a real lack of "good" data. Some articles published in medical journals give similar flowcharts but they are quite different from the one given here. A few years ago, there was talk about an "epidemic" of medical errors. I haven't seen much news coverage lately. So, I guess, all is well. May be, I am wrong. I am certainly not too close to this and am not a part of the Healthcare Industry. Anyway, these are just some preliminary thoughts. Now fire away and let's see how we could IMPROVE this further.

Charmed

P. S. I went back and read all your posts more carefully - I had too focussed on the flow chart idea that hit me. From what you have compiled, it looks like medical errors are back in the news.
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