Maximizing Failure Mode & Effects Analysis
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Transcript Maximizing Failure Mode & Effects Analysis
MAXIMIZING FAILURE MODE &
EFFECTS ANALYSIS AS AN EFFECTIVE
RISK MANAGEMENT TOOL
Sandra Thompson
Administrator, Quality Resources/Compliance
Laurens County Health Care System
Clinton, SC
Thursday, May 31, 2012
TODAY’S GOALS
Discuss establishing a “Culture of Safety”
Describe the linkage between and importance of FMEA
to RM
Identify the TJC FMEA requirements
Discuss the basics of failure mode and effects analysis
Identify tools and resources for further information &
study
A GROWING CONCERN FOR PATIENT SAFETY….
1995: “The year that medicine went to Hell in
a handbasket” - Dennis O’Leary, JCAHO President, 9/01
Tampa:
Wrong site surgery
Dana Farber: Chemo event
Martin Memorial: Anesthesia event
These events helped drive a consensus for
change
“CULTURE OF SAFETY”
Imperative driven by IOM reports
“To Err is Human” – 1999
“Crossing the Quality Chasm” – 2000
Culture of Safety is owned by ALL
Not physicians, Administration, or a single department
Requires new tools, new thinking, new information
not traditionally utilized in healthcare
FMEA, RCA, Six Sigma, Lean, Systems Engineering,
????
NEW TOOLS/NEW THINKING
Root cause analysis
Lean
Forcing functions (poke yoke)
Standardization (5S)
Customer focus (value stream mapping)
Front-line staff involvement (observation – “going to the gemba”,
spaghetti diagrams)
Push/pull systems (patient flow)
High-reliability organizations
“Going for Zero”
Electronic health record
Proactive risk assessment
Healthcare FMEA!
TOOLS OF CHANGE
Proactive
Proactive Risk Assessment
(FMEA, HFMEA)
Automation,
Computerization
Standardization
Protocols, PrePrinted Orders
Checklists
Least
Effective
Effectiveness Scale
Forcing
Functions
Most
Effective
Rules & DoubleChecking
Information
Inspection
Education
Reactive
Auditing
HFMEA is a proactive
means of assessing &
decreasing risk in your
organization!
FMEA VS. HFMEA
FMEA
Failure
Mode & Effect Analysis
Traditionally used in industry
Looks at a device or a component
HFMEA
Healthcare
Failure Mode & Effect Analysis
Looks at a process
HFMEA
Process developed by VA Pt. Safety Center
Online tutorial at:
http://www.patientsafety.gov/CogAids/HFMEA/ind
ex.html#page=page-1
FAILURE MODE & EFFECT ANALYSIS
Do you take actions to prevent yourself from being late to work?
Yes or No
Do you “take the shortcut” when you see traffic building up in a
familiar place?
Yes or No
Do you try to distinguish “big problems” from “little problems”?
Yes or No
Do you see the possibility of eliminating some problems, but
need a better way to show that to people?
Yes or No
FAILURE/FAILURE MODE
Failure
When
process begins to produce undesired
results/effects
Failure Mode
Weakness/vulnerability
in any part of process
Chain of events that has potential to cause safety
problem
RISK MANAGEMENT PERSPECTIVE
Assists RMs to favorably impact the patient care environment
Another tool in the box of RM strategies to understand and
reduce medical error
Assists RMs & others in driving change before it can do harm
Proactively forecasts potential failures
Applies risk /loss control techniques to those potential
failures
WHERE TO START: FOUNDATION
What philosophy ?
“Blame free” vs. “Just Culture”
Do we see systems or individuals?
Are the right tools & resources available for the job?
What is an incident to be reported at your facility?
Close call/near miss/”good catches”?
Only adverse events (e.g., “harm”)?
Sentinel events?
Where do willfully unsafe acts fit in? Disruptive behavior?
WHERE TO START: FOUNDATION
Design/redesign incident reporting systems to
capture near misses
Predictive – show patterns around a process –
100:10:1
Rich source of information
Reward/encourage near miss reporting
Follow up on near misses and trend
Don’t forget the narrative! Important details found here
Close the loop – report back to staff on trends, patterns
noted, solicit suggestions for improvement
WHERE TO START: FOUNDATION
Must filter the tidal wave!
WHERE TO START: FOUNDATION
For each reported incident:
Assign Severity
Catastrophic
Failure could cause death or serious
injury (Sentinel Events)
Major
Permanent lessening of bodily
functioning, disfigurement, surgical
intervention required, additional
treatment required (3 or more
patients)
Moderate
Increased LOS, increased level of care
(1-2 patients)
Minor
No injury, no increased LOS, no
increased level of care
WHERE TO START: FOUNDATION
Assign Frequency:
Frequent: Likely to occur immediately or within a short period (may
happen several times in one year)
Occasional: Probably will occur (may happen several times in 1-2 years)
Uncommon: Possible to occur (may happen sometime in 2-5 years)
Remote: Unlikely to occur (may happen sometime in 5-30 years)
CULTURE OF SAFETY: FOUNDATION
Apply the risk management equation
Severity
x Frequency = RISK
What resources per level of risk?
Examine trends/patterns
Severity
Probability
Catastrophic
Major
Moderate
Minor
Frequent
3
3
2
1
Occasional
3
2
1
1
Uncommon
3
2
1
1
Remote
3
2
1
1
GETTING STARTED: SELECT A HIGH-RISK
PROCESS
Sources:
Your incident report data
Loss runs/claims data
Brainstorm list of HR processes for your organization
Consider physical resources, environment, staffing, etc.
Worker’s Compensation reports
Literature
Sentinel Event Alerts
Infection Control data
IHI
Joint Commission
Organizational strategic quality goals/objectives
ASSEMBLE A TEAM
Multidisciplinary group who have hands-on
experience with the selected
process/procedure
Include
physicians!
RM role
May
be multifaceted
CAUTION: Leader/Facilitator
DIAGRAM THE PROCESS
ABSOLUTE MUST:
Tools:
Direct observation of process (Lean)
“Process Mapping” vs. Flowcharting
Fishbone (Cause & Effect Diagram)
Current State Stream Maps (Lean)
Differentiate - need TWO maps!
“The way things were intended to work”
“The way things are actually working”
PROCESS MAPPING
Process Step
Process Step
Process Step
1
2
3
Medication
ordered
Auto electronic
transfer to
Pharmacy
system
Pharmacy fills
scipt; sends to
floor
Process Step
4
Nurse
administers
Sub-Processes
Sub-Processes
A.
B.
A.
B.
Dummy terminal
PCs
Dummy terminal
PCs
Sub-Processes
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
Check drug
allergies
Check drug
interactions
Check proper
dosages
Orders labs
Order sent to
auto dispensing
Sub-Processes
A.
B.
C.
D.
Automatically
fills orders
checked
Drugs pulled
and script filled
Med cart filled
Cart sent to
floor
Sub-Processes
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.
Log on to
laptop
Medcart
Medications
scanned
Patient band
scanned
Medication
given to pt.
Pt. record
updated
IDENTIFY POTENTIAL FAILURE MODES
Compare “ideal” vs. “reality”
May be multiple failure modes – list all
Each failure mode can have multiple possible effects
Tool: Brainstorming
Ask:
What could fail with this step? (i.e., failure modes)
Why would this failure occur? (i.d., causes)
What could happen if this failure occurred? (i.e., effects)
ASSESS FAILURE MODES-IDENTIFY CAUSES
Assess risk – severity/probability
Tools:
Fishbone (C&E) Diagram
Hazard Scoring Matrix (HFMEA)
Probability
Severity
Catastrophic
Major
Moderate
Minor
Frequent
16
12
8
4
Occasional
12
9
6
3
Uncommon
8
6
4
2
Remote
4
3
2
1
ADDITIONAL STEPS
Decision (proceed or stop)
If
score 8 or higher & decision to stop, document
rationale
Tools:
Decision
Tree (HFMEA)
HFMEA Worksheet
Develop action plan for change
Include
outcome measures, management
concurrence
PROTECTING THE PROCESS
Concerns re: discoverability
Could provide potent evidence for plaintiff if all potential
failures not addressed & mishap occurs involving that
failure point
Follow current procedures under state law relative to
peer review protection
Must be produced under guidance of medical staff &
reviewed in “medical staff committee”
Include “disclaimer” on document
Seek guidance from legal counsel
REMEMBER…..
Seek support from senior leadership
Include physicians
Executive/Administrative Sponsor?
Physician Champion
Seek out trained facilitator OR get training in facilitation
Important to open communication
Involve front-line staff; give them ownership
Look for best practices already identified for the process
being assessed
QUESTIONS?
RESOURCES
VA Center for Patient Safety
HFMEA Toolkit
http://www.patientsafety.gov/CogAids/HFMEA/index.ht
ml#page=page-1
Institute for Healthcare Improvement
Online tool for conducting FMEA; can be shared
Tutorials, journal articles
Completed examples
http://www.ihi.org/knowledge/Pages/Tools/FailureMod
esandEffectsAnalysisTool.aspx
OTHER RESOURCES
http://www.patientsafety.gov/SafetyTopics/HFMEA
/FMEA2.pdf
http://psnet.ahrq.gov/resource.aspx?resourceID=
1531
http://www.patientsafety.gov/SafetyTopics/HFMEA
/HFMEAIntro.pdf
http://intranet.uchicago.edu/quality/FailureMode
sandEffectsAnalysis_FMEA_1.pdf
http://www.patientsafety.gov/SafetyTopics/HFMEA
/HFMEA_JQI.pdf