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2002 Colorado Patient Safety
Award Recipients |
The Colorado Patient Safety Coalition is pleased to
announce the winners of the 2002 Patient Safety Awards, presented at the "Do No
Harm" Annual Conference on November 1, 2002:
Patient Safety Leadership Award
Presented to: Community
Hospital of Grand Junction, CO
Received by: Mr. Randall Phillips, President and Chief
Executive Officer.
High-quality healthcare requires
excellence in many areas, medical practice, guest relations, and most importantly,
patient-guest safety. This can only be achieved through an integrated culture of safety.
The
leadership of Community Hospital recognizes that a culture of safety starts at
the top, with them. The Board of Trustees and Senior Leadership have long been involved in
safety initiatives and made safety a priority over 4 years ago. However, in 2002 they
elected to make patient-guest safety a more deliberate, stated focus by the adoption of
patient-guest safety as a top priority strategic initiative. The Boards
intention is to keep patient-guest safety a strategic priority focus well into the future.
Community Hospital
understands that environments where you talk patient-guest safety and
live patient-guest safety are very different. Community Hospital
lives quality and patient-guest safety through a culture of partnerships that
promotes new ideas and open communication among and between all employees, physicians and
volunteer Partners. This culture of Partnerships clearly defines each individuals
role and responsibility to ensure the safety of each patient-guest in the facility,
through a process of orientation, ongoing education and performance review. Every Partner
is responsible for improvement and for identifying areas to enhance patient-guest safety.
Community Hospitals Partners recognize that safety is an integral part of the larger
picture of organizational quality and excellence.
Patient
Safety Leadership Award
Presented to: Kaiser Permanente Clinical Pharmacy Call Center
Received by: Dr.
Dennis Helling, Pharmacy
Administrator
A time of transition
is a time of great risk for a patient's safety. Kaiser
Permanente of Colorado has recognized this, and has evolved a unique support system for
new patients enrolling in their health plan. New
members are encouraged to call a clinical pharmacist who spends approximately 45 minutes
discussing and reviewing the patient's current drug regimen. The prescriptions are confirmed with the previous
dispensing pharmacy, and discrepancies are resolved.
The Kaiser
Permanente Clinical Pharmacy Call Center has studied the effectiveness of this program,
and has found that:
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11% of patients were on medications inconsistent
with evidence-based national guidelines and changed to more appropriate therapy.
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6% admitted non-compliance and were educated about the importance of
their medications.
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12% were taking medications that they no longer needed.
These were discontinued.
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14% were identified as smokers and were provided information on smoking
cessation.
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100% had their medication allergy information entered into the electronic
medical record and the pharmacy computer system.
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26% were on medications that required laboratory monitoring which was
ordered.
Projecting these
numbers to the 30,000 new members who contacted the pharmacy call center in the last 3
years shows the dramatic effect that this process has had on protecting patients during
this vulnerable period of transition. The
physicians and the patients have welcomed this intervention by the clinical pharmacist
call center alike, as it reduces insecurity, extra work and confusion at the time of
transition.
Patient
Safety Leadership Award
Presented to: Dr. Michael
Dohm
Dr.
Michael Dohm, orthopaedic surgeon, has been a tireless advocate for change in the areas of
patient safety and quality improvement throughout his entire career. Dr, Dohm put his
money and personal effort into the Western Slope Study Group that he founded in 1997. From
its inception, the Western Slope Study Group has championed outcomes data collection and
evidence-based practice in a collaborative, non-threatening environment dedicated to
improving patient care and safety.
The Western Slope Study Group propagates the
discipline of evidence-based practice through application of an evolving provider
education model, developed by Dr. Dohm and his colleagues and termed KADRE: Knowledge, Assimilation, Data collection,
Reflection and Education.
For 10 years Dohm has voluntarily taught
orthopaedics to Residents at St. Marys Hospital Family Medicine Residency Program.
His services include: weekly Radiology Review, monthly Orthopaedic
Conferences and a curriculum of active learning presentations. In 1999,Western Slope Study
Group, under Dr. Dohms leadership, developed the Evidence-Based Medicine Conference
delivered in Grand Junction to over 60 primary care providers. He presented: the E. A.
Codman Lecture: Clinical Truth and Humbug.
Within his community, Dr. Dohm has brought
together physicians and hospital administrators through the formation of discussion groups
that have led to the recommendation of improved safety practices involving both clinicians
and hospital staff
and from what we understand, his work is far from over!
Patient
Safety Leadership Award
Presented to: Colorado
State Board of Medical Examiners
Received by:
Dr. Ned Colange, Board President and Chief Medical Officer of the Colorado Department of
Public Health and Environment and Susan Miller, Administrator, Colorado State Board
of Medical Examiners
The BME has recognized
the importance of preventing licensing problems rather than dealing with them only after
they occur. In it's January 2002 edition of
The Examiner (the newsletter of the Board that is circulated to all licensees), the board
began to publish anonymous stories of actual cases where they believe a systems problem
may have been at fault for the problem. The initial issue focused on problems with
communication; communication from a physician to a patient;
Communication with
other physicians providing intermittent practice coverage; communication with other
practitioners in a new care setting, etc.
The CPSC celebrates
this new approach of the BME as it shares the issues that have caused problems with a
licensee in such a manner that others may learn from the systems problems that others have
experienced. Hopefully this new approach will
prove successful in preventing future errors, placing the patients of Colorado physicians
at less risk for future systems errors.
Patient
Safety Leadership Award
Presented to: Department of Veterans
Affairs: Southern Colorado Healthcare System
Received by: Ms. Cathy Hamilton,
Patient Safety/Risk Manager
The Veterans
Affairs Southern Colorado Health Cared System has shown leadership in its strong efforts
to implement the protocols developed by the VA's National Center for Patient Safety. These
protocols involve the analysis of specific events, and the application of root cause
analysis to identify the human behaviors to modify, and barriers to safety that needs to
be overcome. The Veterans Affairs Southern Colorado team has done a great deal to
establish and encourage the deployment of the patient safety models to address specific
issues here in Colorado including the following:
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Anti
Coagulant Monitoring Initiative: With the help of the Denver VA
Pharmacy staff, a new "Anti Coagulant Monitoring Initiative" was developed to
address specific problems that were identified here in Colorado. The effort has resulted in the careful monitoring
of the use of anti-coagulants for the VAs southern Colorado patients.
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Managing
Change: When the VAs
Ft. Lyon facility converted its focus to that of an outpatient care center, many existing
patients had to adjust to the need to have appointments for their care - rather than
walking in for "care on demand". During
his time, the southern Colorado VA developed a triage system to assure that this patients
showing up for care on demand were appropriately cared for if/when needed. This protocol recognized the potential for harm
given the historical use patterns of the patient, and established a rational procedure to
convert to an appointment system.
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Continuity
of Care: A
"Continuity of Care" initiative that focuses upon the appropriate communication
between private health care facilities, emergency departments, and the VA system. The VA team recognized that in making care
transitions that valuable information was being lost.
Through the use of patient assessment forms and a minimum data set, the VA forwards
information along with patients as they navigate the health care system, thus assuring
that vital information is made available to practitioners wherever the care may be given.
Patient
Safety Leadership Award
Presented to: Dr. Wilson D. Pace
Dr. Pace has become a leader in our state in the
emerging field of patient safety. As a
Principal Investigator for a federally funded multi year study, Dr. Pace has brought
together a number of individuals and organizations in Colorado to focus upon how we may
identify, analyze, and reduce errors in the area of ambulatory primary care. Through the
research project that Dr. Pace leads (entitled ASIPS Applied Strategies
for Improving Patient Safety) the identification and reporting of occurrences with the
potential to cascade into patient harm will be carried out on a large scale.
This work is not easy. As the leader of a Practice-Based Research
Network, Dr. Pace (Wilson) has used his own political capital, intellect, and wit to
involve over 600 clinicians, administrators, and researchers in this effort. The
nomination that was received for Dr. Pace is an indicator of the respect that he commands
in this area and was signed by ten of his colleagues!
It is anticipated that Dr. Paces
leadership and hard work will result in the establishment of the Health Sciences Center,
the Department of Family Medicine, the CareNet and High Plains Research Networks, and
affiliated organizations as a patient safety resource within the Rocky Mountain West, and
beyond. Please join me in acknowledging Dr.
Paces contributions.
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Patient
Safety Leadership Award
Presented to: Rose Medical Center Medication Safety Committee
Received by: Mr. Jefferey Stroup
Medication safety has always been a top
leadership priority at Rose Medical Center. However,
in 1999, the Institute for Safe Medication Practices conducted one of its first site
visits in the nation at Rose. As a result of the Institutes cutting edge analysis,
Rose embarked on a comprehensive and long-term plan to improve all practices related to
use of medications.
In addition to the formation of a
multidisciplinary Medication Safety team, Rose committed additional resources to
medication safety by implementing a new full-time professional position, a Medication
Safety Coordinator, to lead the team and meet the program goals.
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Since then, Rose Medical Center Medication Safety
Team has successfully implemented many measurable improvements. Some of the highlights of
their success are:
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Implementation of physician prescribing
guidelines reducing errors related to physician documentation issues - including the use of abbreviations.
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Development of a comprehensive Pain
Management program resulting in fewer errors related to the use of opiates and improved
competency of nursing and pharmacy staff.
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Improved Medication Safety Orientation for
nursing and pharmacy staff with emphasis on a non-punitive proactive culture of
improvement.
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Implementation of a unit doses program and
computerized Medication Administration Record in high-risk areas such as the neonatal
intensive care unit.
Moving forward, technology will play a big role
in improving medication safety at Rose. For example, in January 2003, Rose is scheduled to
implement a computerized Medication Administration Record, featuring bedside computerized
point of care bar code scanning system thorough the entire hospital. Use of bar coding is anticipated to eliminate
errors related to wrong patient, wrong medication and dose and wrong time, the most common
types of administration errors.
Clearly Rose Medical Center has taken the lead to
improve medication safety and continues to serve as an outstanding example of excellence
for all others.
Accepting the award on behalf of the Rose
Medication Safety Team is its chairperson and Medication Safety Coordinator, Mr. Jeffery
Stroup.
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Patient
Safety Leadership Award
Presented to: Association of periOperative Registered Nurses
Received by Ms. Julie Massaro, VP of
Marketing and External Relations
The Colorado Patient Safety Coalition (CPSC) is
pleased to present a 2002 Colorado Patient Safety Award to the Association of
periOperative Registered Nurses (AORN). To address the growing public and professional
concern about patient safety, AORN created the AORN Presidential Commission on Patient
Safety. Commission members determine strategies and initiatives that will place AORN in
the forefront of patient safety issues in the perioperative setting, and will support
organizational efforts to coordinate a common venue for dialogue among the various members
of the multidisciplinary perioperative team. Through its patient safety initiative and
Patient Safety First program, AORN is identifying, collecting, and developing clinical and
educational resources to help perioperative nurses ensure safe, quality patient care. For
example AORN has developed the following member resources:
1.
A Patient Safety First web site designed to
provide ready access to resources related to patient safety in surgical settings
2. A safety consult e-mail address for members to offer their
comments and suggestions or ask for advice about safety in surgical settings.
3.
A patient safety hotline with
toll-free access for members to call with their patient safety questions.
The CPSC recognizes the
innovation and commitment of AORN to support perioperative nurses in Colorado and
nationally in their efforts to provide quality patient care by presenting this 2002
Colorado Patient Safety Award to the Association of periOperative Registered Nurses
(AORN).
Congratulations, all!
The Coalition would also like the
recognize the the following individuals for their work on the Awards Committee:
Committee Chair:
Donna Kusuda
Committee Members: Mark
Levine, Paul Harshman
Technical and Moral Support:
Mary Fletcher, Linda Kanamine
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