Transcript Document
Fundamentals of Risk Management &
Patient Safety for Community Health
Centers
On-site RM Training Seminar – November 2008
Petra S. Berger PhD RN, CPHRM
Healthcare Risk, Quality, and Patient Safety Consultant
[email protected]
-
Phone: 517–281-7816
1
Learning Objectives
Demonstrate understanding of risk issues inherent
in providing community health center services
Explain leadership tools & methods related to:
Proactively identifying risk concerns, and
Responding from the risk control, quality, and
patient safety perspective
Recognize the critical role played by patients and
families regarding high risk aspects of patient care
2
Definitions
Risk Management & Liability Coverage
What is “Risk management” @ CHCs
Dir. & Officers: Financial, Contracting
Employment Practice, Workers’ Comp
General Liability: Property etc.
Concepts in Professional Liability
Risk identification & reporting
Clinical Liability review
Risk intervention: immediate & QI referral
3
VITAL BRIDGE OVER TROUBLED WATERS
QUALITY MANAGEMENT
Patient Safety = Q. I.
Risk Management
= identify risk – respond – prevent
4
CORE PURPOSE of RISK MANAGEMENT
S T O P ADVERSE OUTCOMES
Preventing Patient harm
Protecting Healthcare facility from
litigation and financial loss
patient and community distrust
Protecting involved Providers
5
QUALITY OUTCOMES & RISK ASPECTS
on O N E Quality Management Platform
Patient Satisfaction
complaint management
Clinical Effectiveness
missed diagnosis
Policies & Protocols
after hours coverage
Regulatory compliance
informed consent
Efficiency, UR, Cost control
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Risk & Quality Leadership Roles
A culture of safety in which individuals can
draw attention to potential or real hazards,
barriers, gaps, or failures without fear
Non – punitive reporting
Strategic Risk & Quality planning based on
Prioritization
Implementation of practice guidelines and
procedures through Monitoring and Q. I.
“Knowledge transfer” of patient safety practices
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Health Center Trends and Issues
FTCA CLAIMS DATA
Claims Occurrence
Error in Diagnosis
30%
Treatment related
21%
Medication related
10%
OB Related
22%
Surgical Procedures 6%
Claims Location
Health Center 65%
Hospital 35%
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Liability Question: Allegation of NEGLIGENCE
Duty – based on existing provider-patient relationship
To exercise degree of care that a reasonable
& competent provider would exercise under
same or similar circumstances
Breach of Duty
Plaintiff must show that defendants failed to
exercise ‘reasonable’ care, and adherence to
established clinical standard (expert testimony)
Injury proximately CAUSED by breach (foreseeable)
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Case: Incomplete Medication History
58-year-old male patient was scheduled for a
major diagnostic procedure at the hospital
where a certified registered nurse anesthetist
(CRNA) provided conscious sedation.
A required copy of the clinic medical record
was sent preoperatively.
No mention was made of the patient’s seizure
medication.
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Case: Seizure & Respiratory arrest
No recent blood level had been obtained related
to the patient’s seizure medication.
Patient compliance with the medication was
unknown.
The patient underwent scheduled procedure
Patient experienced a grand mal seizure during
the procedure and had a respiratory arrest.
Intubation was delayed and the patient suffered
permanent brain damage.
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Immediate RISK INTERVENTION
PATIENT STATUS?
Medical Record As Core Evidence
Privileged & protected information
Fact-based investigation
No premature conclusions
Timelines and event analysis (RCA)
Sequestering evidence
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Alleged Negligence: Duty? Breach?
A. Clinical standards of care = ‘duty’
Monitoring, patient medication & document
Test result reported & signed off by provider
Treatment plan updated, w/ or w/out change
Reliable medical record system @ hand off
with external medical providers and hospital
B. [CRNA & hospital standards of care]
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P o l i c y & P r o c e d u r e s:
Standards by which Care is judged
Difficult to defend policy & procedure:
If not based on evidence-based guidelines
If no allowance is made for clinical
judgment to vary from protocol
If local practice not the same as policies
If not monitored for adherence
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RISK IDENTIFICATION
Generic screens: waiting times, no show rate
Incident (or occurrence) reporting (1 - 30%)
Omitted or delayed diagnostic reporting
Adverse medication event –outcome /process
Patient or family complaint; Feedback
Staff feedback & surveys
Risk reporting marathons
Electronic information system
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Procedures of
Incident reporting
H o w to complete incident report
Fact based, objective, w/ timeline
No speculation, opinion, blaming
not: “gave wrong med”
Persons notified: RM, provider, family
No copy – no staples – no mention, MR placement
Medical record documentation
Date & time, provider actions
Patient’s clinical status; quotes not adjectives
NO PERSONAL NOTE KEEPING
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Risk vs. Quality measures: need both
Sample RISK MEASURES
Patient complaints
Misfiled and non initialed test results
Missed diagnosis: Cancer
Insulin medication error and patient harm
Adherence to Anticoagulation guidelines
Sample QUALITY MEASURES
Medical record documentation audits /criteria
Diabetic HgbA1C baseline & improvement
Pediatric Immunization rates
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TJC: National Pt Safety Goals
Patient identification
Verbal orders
Hand off @ transition
Medication reconciliation
Critical lab value reporting
Patient involvement in care
Suicide assessment
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Risk aspect #1:
Risk aspect #2:
Patient communication
Provider Team Communication
PATIENT COMMUNICATION
Patient interview & Treatment planning
Health instruction – literacy – interpreters
Patient feedback & complaints
PROVIDER TEAM COMMUNICATION
Hand off @ transition points
Inter-provider relations & teamwork
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Risk aspects #3: The Medical Record
Risk aspects #4:
Clinic Operation &
Flow
The Medical Record
Chart content & What To Document
Legal aspects: alterations, legibility, etc.
Confidentiality & Release of information
Clinic Operation & Flow
Continuum of care (62% claims) vs. fragmentation
Diagnostic test tracking
After hours coverage; telephone triage
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Risk aspects #5:
Risk aspects # 6:
Clinical Practice
Medical Mis-Diagnosis
Patient assessment & monitoring
Treatment & Use of Practice Guidelines
Medication prescription practice
Complications, preventable
OB, Surgical procedures, Emergency visit
Most frequent Mis-Diagnosis
Inadequate medical history & physical exam
Insufficient diagnostic work-up
Incorrect interpretation of diagnostic tests
Incomplete follow-up
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Risk aspect # 7:
Medication Safety
Risk aspect # 8: EQUIPMENT – EOC – EMERGENCY
Adverse Medication events related to phases:
Product labeling, packaging, nomenclature
Prescribing: Indications, interaction, off label
Dispensing: compounding, distribution error
Administration: wrong drug/ dose/ route
Emergency Preparedness
Crash cart (incl. pediatrics) & checks
Behavioral
Building /weather
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Risk aspect #9:
Risk aspect #10:
Clinic Staff performance
Medical Provider Quality
Staff qualification & orientation
Clear directives & protocols
Orientation and Training
Staffing levels
Material resources
Medical Provider Quality & Peer review
Review mechanism – why, who and how
Data sources and Measures
Quality indicators
Risk indicators and events
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Risk Aspects of Clinic Services I
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High Risk Clinic Service Aspects – I
Diagnostic ordering and test tracking
Patient & Family Communication
Informed consent and refusal
Telephone triage, After hours, No shows
Patient satisfaction & complaints
Health Literacy
Non compliance
Termination of Care
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Risk aspect #4:
Diagnostic test tracking & QC audits
Test ordered by med. provider & log
Request form created - copy retained
Test completed - patient compliance?
Results received & logged in / ck log
Results reported to provider (same
day for abnormal /critical results)
Patient notification documented
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Risk aspect #1: Patient communication
Patient assessment & interview
Treatment planning & consent
Health instruction – literacy – interpreters
Conflict resolution; Non compliance
Termination of care
Explain back / read back
Patient feedback & satisfaction
Complaint management
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Medication compliance
PATIENT COMMUNICATION
Medical literacy & English proficiency
Lay language
Validated understanding
Hearing, vision limitations ?
50% non-adherence to prescribed meds
8.4 mio not taking hypertension meds
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Why Do People Sue?
Study of law suits against a large medical
center indicated Problematic Relationships:
Perceived desertion of the patient
Devaluing patient and/or family views
Poorly delivering health information
Failing to understand the perspective of
patient and/or family
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Informed Consent
Used whenever an invasive procedure is
proposed that carries a material risk of harm
Need to have a discussion of the
Procedure and benefits (P)
Risks of the procedure ( R)
Alternatives to the procedure (A)
Questions asked (Q)
What should be documented?
Consent process, any questions answered
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Informed Refusal - signed
Should be obtained whenever refusal to
have a test or procedure done may have
adverse results – related to index of suspicion
Examples
Mammograms
Chest or other x-rays
Cardiac work-ups
Lumbar punctures
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Telephone triage & Legible Documentation
Using protocols adopted by medical staff,
or direct consultation w/ med. provider
Name of Caller & purpose of call
Advice & orders given (prescription refills)
Follow-up instructions
Date, time, AND initial of provider
Review through Q.I. process
Based on criteria of clinical protocols
32
Telephone communication
Document phone calls incl. AFTER HOURS
calls, in the medical record if the following
was discussed:
medical symptoms, new or continued
abnormal test results reported
medical advice offered
questions about medical treatment
prescriptions provided
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Missed appointments – No Shows
Tracking high-risk patients who miss
scheduled appointment
Pending diagnostic results?
Documenting all notification attempts
Include medical implication of missing
appointments
If worsened outcome possible, a certified
letter is sent, with copy & receipt in medical
record
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Risk ID through Patient Complaint
Categorize types of complaints
Prioritize by severity & risk level
Establish who is responsible for
responding to the complaints
Log and trend complaints & resolution
Address systems issues through P.I.
35
Risk-related Inventory
Reasons for Care Termination
Group A
1. Repeatedly missing appointments w/out prior notification
2. Disagreement over treatment recommendations
3. Non-adherence /non-cooperation w/ treatment plan
Group B
1. Verbally disruptive and hostile behavior toward medical
provider and/or staff [by patient or family /caregiver]
2. Threatening behavior toward medical provider / staff
Group C
1. Noncompliance with office policy re: prescriptions
Group D
1. Delinquency on bill payments
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Termination of Care
Solution of ‘last resort’
Patient given notice of termination
Patient given reasonable amount of time in
which to obtain alternative care
Evidence of certified letter in chart
Usually thirty days
Patient given assistance in obtaining
alternative care
e.g., a list of appropriate potential providers
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Perhaps not now -- Termination of Care
During treatment for an imminent or unstable
medical condition
Mental health disability if yet untreated
in process of medical workup for diagnosis
Pregnant patient, approx. last trimester
Pregnant patient approx. last 2 trimesters if high risk
Patient in immediate postoperative stage
Precaution w/discrimination issues, e.g. HIV
Remote area and lack of alternate providers
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Risk Aspects of Clinic Services II
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High Risk Clinic Service Aspects – II
Staff communication & Human Factors
Credentialing, Privileging, Peer review
Clinical risk factors in Perinatal, Surgical,
Behavioral Health, and Dental Services
Emergency Response
40
Provider Team Communication
Half of communication breakdowns
occurred as patients were HANDED OFF
@ TRANSITION POINTS between
providers (verbal & written)
2/3 of serious medical errors occur @
transition points (TJC reports)
Inter-provider relations & teamwork
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Risk aspect #9: STAFF PERFORMANCE
Staff qualification & orientation
Clear directives/protocols & Training
Staffing levels & Material resources
Human factor remedies:
distraction, memory overload, fatigue,
confirmation bias
Provide Performance feedback
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Human Factor:
Patient safety Ownership & Just Culture
Imperfect behaviors, lapses, oversight
At-risk behaviors -- e.g. shortcuts
Inadequate realization of risk, poor risk awareness,
inadequate diligence – systems barriers & gaps?
Intentional conduct that unintentionally increases
risk of harm: policy non compliance re: double checks
Reckless behavior /questionable moral judgment
Recognition of high risk, BUT risk is disregarded;
commission of intentionally hazardous acts -- cause
violation of trust; e.g. alteration of medical records
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Quality & Peer review:
Clinical Practice Pattern
Medical evaluation & Treatment
Medication therapy
Pre-natal risk factors
Pre-, intra- & post-surgical Tx & evaluation
Use of Practice Guidelines: decrease variability
Complex medical condition: Cancer, Co-morbidities
Asthma, Anticoagulants, Stroke, Pediatric Fever
Complications, preventable
OB, Surgical procedures, Emergency
Sample protocols can be accessed at http://www.guideline.gov/
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Clinical Protocols w/ Risk Focus
Pre natal risk assessment & OB practice
Fever in Children (ACEP)
Stroke
Chest pain
Abdominal pain
Anticoagulant Management
Sample protocols can be accessed at
http://www.guideline.gov/
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Pain assessment: a diagnostic Key
Assessment (Pain & Headache) & DOCUMENT
Location and Radiation (All locations)
Onset – Duration - Frequency
Severity (per scale 1 – 10)
Pain Quality or Type (pressure, cramps etc.)
Last dose of Pain medication / frequency
Recent Health history, events, procedures
Other S & S: weakness, numbness, neck pain,
stiffness, photophobia, diaphoresis, N-V, SOB
(LMP)
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Confirmation Bias
Paris in the
the Spring
Once we decide that we “know” what
something is, we tend to exclude or neglect
information that may be contrary to our
original perceptions
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Pre-natal risk assessment
PRE NATAL ASSESSMENT per protocol (standardized)
Consistent documentation, prenatal visits
Prompt high risk referral
PRE NATAL MED. RECORD TO HOSPITAL @ 36 wks
Maternal conditions: hypertension – prior
PE – diabetes – drug & alcohol – antepartum
hemorrhage – cardiac risk factors
http://www.rmf.harvard.edu/; AAFP standards / ACOG standards
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SURGICAL PROCEDURES
Scope of Privileges
Patient assessment, pre procedure
Informed Consent and Refusal
History & Physical
Prev. complications related to procedures
Patient education / Health literacy
Post procedure follow up:
Complication? Infection? Pain?
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BEHAVIORAL HEALTHCARE
Initial Assessment & Treatment Plan
Suicide assessment and Safety precautions
Case management
Medication therapy (?informed consent)
Monitoring of effects and compliance
Patient /family education: purpose /side effects
On-going acuity assessment & referrals
Documentation standards & confidentiality
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Suicide assessment - Document
Concurrent Dx: depression \bi-polar \psychosis
Family history
Previous patient attempts
Lack of social support
Recent significant loss
Alcohol /drug intoxication
Terminal or chronic debilitating disease
Abrupt withdrawal from normal routine
John Hopkins Health Information, 1998. Spotting the Warning Signs of Suicide
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Incidental Assessment
of Abuse or Neglect
Domestic violence: child – dep. adult – partner
Mandatory reporting laws: suspect, not prove
How to assess:
Ask about abuse in private w/ respect, non blame
Feel safe? What stress? Should I be concerned?
Emergency plans? Resources: friends, family?
Contusions, abrasions (head, chest, abd); fractures
Abuse during pregnancy
DOCUMENT in detail a n d objectively
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Human Performance Factor
for Medical Providers
Clinical /technical judgment & knowledge
Diagnostic practice pattern & experience
Medication knowledge – indications,
interaction, off label use, etc.
Understanding Patient needs: dialogue,
health education & clinical monitoring
Communication skills: providers, patients
Documentation skills
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Credentialing Focus
Initial credentialing varies from re- credentialing
INITIAL:
Licensure verification, References re: privileges
Qualifying education & experience, NPDB
RE-CREDENTIALING:
Quality & Risk data required
Which value-added measures to select
How to obtain the data efficiently
What to do with quality information
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Credentialing process:
Initial
Responsibility of medical staff and board
Include all mid level providers & residents
Documented process to grant privileges
Reference letters address privileges sought
Qualifying education & experience - criteria
NPDB query, all states w/ previous practice
Initial criminal background check
Check all staff & volunteers, pertinent states
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Re-credentialing & Quality indicators
Patient assessment & monitoring (MR)
Diagnostic services and follow up
Unclear /inconsistent documentation
Medication prescription pattern
Guideline adherence: e.g. Anticoagulant Tx
Communication – team & patient relations
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California Dept. Managed Health Care (DMHC) Fines
Kaiser Health Plan for Lack of Quality Oversight (7/07)
DMHC observed that of 228 peer-review files, onethird were deficient, such as
Not handling quality concerns promptly
Not fully considering a physician’s
complaint history in evaluating peerreview matters.
Not carrying out corrective actions
HRC Alerts at http://www.ecri.org
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Credentialing Files: Risk & Quality section
Credentialing files organized into 2 sections
Separate Quality file per practitioner
Sect. A:
Guideline adherence; Documentation
Sect. B:
P.C.E. = Potentially compensable event
Adverse event review
Peer review result
Top Confidential, keep secured
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Risk aspect #8:
EQUIPMENT – EOC – EMERGENCY RESPONSE
Emergency protocols implemented and monitored
Medical emergency
1 BLS trained staff on-site at all times
Crash cart (incl. pediatrics) & checks
Behavioral
Building /weather (power outage; fire)
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Pediatric office emergencies
“…occur more commonly than perceived by
family physicians; most offices not well
prepared
Obtaining training in pediatric emergencies,
performing mock ‘codes’ to assure office
readiness can improve actual handling of
pediatric emergencies
Common airway emergencies include foreignbody aspiration and croup.”
Source: Wheeler, Kiefer and Poss. American Family Physician, Pediatric Emergency
Preparedness in the Office, June 1, 2000.
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EQUIPMENT LIABILITY
How to protect against risk
THE EQUIPMENT WAS:
used in reasonable manner (vs. ‘user error’)
inspected for obvious defects prior to use
on regular preventative maintenance schedule
All staff using the equipment were trained
Procedures developed & staff trained on
how to respond in case of equipment failure
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Environment of Care
Infection control & Hazardous Material
Develop, implement and monitor an Infection
control (I.C.) plan pertinent to the facility
Involve I.C. professional
Trend I.C. issues & take corrective action
Protect staff, providers, patients, and
visitors from hazardous material
62
Behavioral Emergencies
OSHA cites healthcare facilities under general
duty clause for failure to prevent patient violence
against healthcare workers
Medical providers & staff exposed to potentially
dangerous confrontations incl. ill-intended
trespassers
Security audits needed to reveal problems
Address aspects of potential risk of violence
Source: ECRI, HRC Risk Analysis – Overview: Managing Risks in Physician Practices, July
2003.
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Risk Aspects, Clinic Services III
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High Risk Clinic Service Aspects – III
Medical Record Documentation
Medication Management
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Risk aspects #3:
The Medical Record - Content
Medical history, comprehensive & in ink
Lab work, other diagnostic results
Diagnosis & Current medical problem list
Double check @ each visit before chart returned
All results initialed by medical provider: QC
Patient notification documented: QC
Current medication log in ink (herbals, OTC)
Double check @ each visit before chart returned
Cross off old info w/single line, explain i. e. D/C
66
Personal Health Record (PHR)
Manual or electronic version
Portable / Paper / web based / CD ROM
Content
Updated medication list incl. OTC
Allergies & immunizations w/ dates
Significant recent diagnostic test results
Medical history incl. procedures
Special diet and other health measures
Health insurance information
Living will
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What To Document – Concurrent
Referrals & consultations
Patient notification
Instruction to patient /family, in writing
Questions addressed
Patient's failure to keep appointments
Informed consent / refusal DISCUSSION
All entries timed, dated & signed /initialed
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Guess that Prescription
Handwritten prescriptions are often misread
In the prescription above, the drug name
“Avandia”
was incorrectly interpreted as Coumadin.
http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/557740?src=mp
From American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy
69
Risk & litigation aspects
MEDICAL RECORD DOCUMENTATION
?Treatment rationale; ?Diagnostic Follow Up
Omissions \ delays
Contradictions; confusion between provider
Finger pointing, subjective statements
Corrections: Write overs & White out
Illegibility & error prone abbreviations
Altered Medical Records; “Late entries”
Do not: mention ‘incident report completed’
70
Alteration of Medical Records
A recent case in Ohio involved a physician who
“whited out” the following phrase:
“I do not feel that a biopsy is necessary
at this time”
And replaced it with:
“The patient does not want a biopsy at
this time”
Jury returned a verdict for $3 Million in an
otherwise defensible case !
Destruction of records is equally detrimental
71
Policy development
Confidentiality & Release of information
Release of information
verify request authenticity
Incapacitated adults; Minors
Families of deceased patients
Law enforcement officials /agencies
Employers and other third parties
Protecting Confidentiality
Leaving message on answering machine /at work
Sign in sheet at front desk & privacy
Privacy re: staff conversation /phone calls, reception area
Faxing protocols
72
Faxing documents & Confidentiality
What not to fax: HIV results, mental health records
Avoid sending to general locations, e.g. mailrooms
Request that the recipient acknowledge receipt
Include confidentiality statement on fax cover sheet
If intended recipient does not receive fax because
of incorrect dialing, fax request using incorrect fax
number & request return or destruction of material
73
Medication Safety
Adverse Medication events related to phases:
Product labeling, packaging, nomenclature
Prescribing: Indications, interaction, off label
Antibiotics, anticoagulants, narcotics,
cardiovascular, steroids; serum levels
Dispensing: compounding, distribution error
Administration: wrong drug/ dose/ route
Source: National Coordinating Council on Medication Error Reporting and
Prevention –www.nccmerp.org
74
PROVIDER COMMUNICATION
& MEDS
PHARMACIST function
Legible prescriptions for Pharmacist
Including indications / purpose and/or
diagnosis
Include all of the following components in order:
dose – strength – units/metric – route – frequency
Guarding against LASA drugs:
Restoril ordered, Remoran dispensed
(Antidepressant)
Patient also taking another anti-depressant
75
PROVIDER COMMUNICATION & MEDS
NURSES and Verbal Orders
Restricting Verbal Orders – Limit to Emergencies
Speaking slowly & deliberately
Specific indications /purpose provided for all
medication, including for “as needed” P.R.N.
“Read back” verification, with spelling of drug
name as necessary
Caution w/ sound alike and high alert drugs
Nurses to ask for clarification of illegible or
unclear orders; eliminating second guessing
76
Clinical Protocols
Documenting MEDICATION MONITORING
Cholesterol – liver panel, lipids
Anticonvulsants – drug levels, liver, CBC
Chronic anti-inflammatory /arthritis meds
kidney function, esp. geriatric patients
Anticoagulant
Warfarin / Coumadin – INR, PT, PTT
77
Anti Coagulant Monitoring
heparin – warfarin – other anticoagulants
Warfarin dispensed by pharmacy per Patient
Clinical pharmacist resource support
Education about anticoagulants for
prescribers, nurses and pharmacists
Patient /caregiver education includes
reasons and benefits of therapy
follow-up monitoring /compliance
dietary restriction; potential drug interaction
78
ABBREVIATIONS “Do Not Use” list
- NOT: U (unit) or IU (international unit)
- NOT: Q.D., Q.O.D.
- NOT: MS, MSO4, MgSO4
- NOT: Trailing zero (X.0 mg)- write X mg
- DO use leading zero (NOT .X mg) instead
Do write 0.X mg
79
Sample drugs & Medication security
Manage controlled substances
Manage sample drugs
Storing & securing (authorized access;
log in & out)
No prescription pads in exam rooms
Monitoring expiration dates
Dispensing function
log in & out; lot #
Recall function
80
Protocol: Prescription refills
Medical records reviewed prior to renewals for
Needed labs,
Most recent & next appointment (missed appt?)
Medication renewals limited to patients
previously seen by medical provider in clinic
Pain med renewal ONLY by Medical provider
Document:
Medication name, dose, amount, date of last
appointment, completed labs as applicable
81
Medication Reconciliation
RN/ MA intake interview: takes time
Interview skills
Medication knowledge
Pt. brings in all current medications & OTC
Establish / update Medication Inventory
Keep in visible location on pt. chart
Patient keeps copy and updates
Patient uses Medication inventory daily
Update medication supply @ each visit to
reduce refill requests between visits
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• Select problem
process
• Make change
permanent
(standardize) or
• Understand
the process
• Continue the
PDCA cycle
• Decide on
process steps
to improve
• Collect data
• Analyze data
• Data collection
• Determine the
effectiveness
of the change
• Implement the
change /pilot
• Data analysis
83