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2005 Colorado Patient Safety
Award Recipients |
The Colorado Patient Safety Coalition's
annual Patient Safety Awards are given to
individuals, groups or organizations whose
patient safety projects have demonstrated
leadership
and innovation in improving patient safety
within Colorado. Consideration for an
award is based upon specific activities that
establish an individual, group or organization
as a leader in safe patient practices
Colorado Health and Hospital Association
Improvement Task Force
The Colorado Health and Hospital Association Performance and
Quality Group is nominated for developing and releasing hospital
specific risk-adjusted mortality information for all full
service hospitals in Colorado. Twelve health care, business, and
governmental organizations participated in this effort to
compile information on twelve of the Inpatient Quality
Indicators developed by the Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality.
Memorial Hospital of Colorado Springs Safety
Initiatives
Memorial Hospital of Colorado Springs is nominated for its array
of excellent projects, spanning the spectrum of clinical,
research, and building construction projects. Establishing such
a culture of patient safety demonstrated dedicated inspiration
and commitment from the very top of the organization as well as
outstanding employee performance.
HealthONE Swedish Medical Center Cardiac Alert ProjectHealthONE
Swedish Medical Center is nominated for the Cardiac Alert to
Cath Lab Direct: tools for improvement project. Over a sustained
period of 2 and a quarter years, this collaborative team of
clinicians and managers implemented a continuous quality
improvement process to enhance patient safety for emergency
cardiac patients with very substantial reduction in
door-to-open vessel times.
Denver Health Hand Hygiene
Innovation
Denver Health is
nominated for its Improving, Hand
Hygiene
at Denver Health: a
Multimodal Intervention. Using creativity, humor, strong
educational interventions,
and a multidisciplinary approach, this
team substantially
improved compliance with hand hygiene standards among health
care workers. By bringing together experts from such diverse
departments as hospital and community-based Infection Control,
Patient Safety and Quality, Denver Public Health, Public
Relations and Marketing, and Executive Staff, this project has
changed the institutional culture.
St. Mary's, Grand Junction Transport Collaborative
St Mary's Hospital, Grand
Junction conducted a Failure Mode and Effects
Analysis (FMEA) on
Transports of Critical
Care Patients to/from the
Radiology Department,
in which a broadly collaborative team prospectively mapped all
steps of the process
and all
potential error
opportunities. This activity anticipated the need to
assure the safety of
patients in transition and while outside of the critical care
unit
"As I remember Mama..."
Georgina Schaff nominated her book "As I Remember Mama:
Denied the Right to Die with Dignity or Legally Crucified," in
which she describes her mother's terminal illness and the
difficulty she encountered with the informed consent process as
well as the lack of hospital adherence to her mother's wishes as
stated in her advance directives.
Individual Awards---Each year the Colorado Patient Safety
Coalition recognizes outstanding individual contributions to
patient safety. This year we are pleased to recognize two
outstanding Coloradoans who have influenced the direction and
success of the national patient safety movement.
Dean Ed Dauer, LLB, MPH, has leveraged his expertise as a
legal scholar and educator along with his public health policy
wisdom to develop alternative dispute techniques for the
resolution of medical tort claims. In doing so, he has helped
countless injured patients and their families heal. He has not
only implemented successful mediation strategies, but he has
also sponsored legislation, first in Colorado and now in many
states to facilitate disclosure conversations between hospitals
and health care personnel on the one hand and patients and
families on the other. His work has touched many lives.
Dr. Michael Leonard, Chief of Surgical and
Anesthesia Services
at Colorado Kaiser Permanents
and director of the national
KP patient safety
initiative. Among other innovations, Michael has brought
unusual gifts and compassion
to his work of applying and teaching others, from the field of
aviation and crew resource management techniques in
order to improve safety in
the most complex of medical and surgical settings. His
work is widely
acknowledged as revolutionary. He also has touched many lives.
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