Transcript Slide 1
Christopher Patty, DNP, RN, CPPS Kaweah Delta Medical Center Visalia, California “The hospital is great at adding things for nurses to do, but they never take anything away” Addiction (def.) “Compulsive engagement in rewarding behavior despite adverse consequences” •The DV process induces many distractions, interruptions, procedural failures and clinical errors •Nurses hate it •Patients aren’t crazy about it either Distraction (antonym: concentration) is something I do to myself “…I need to find another nurse to DV this insulin” Interruption is something I do to someone else…”Hey, will you check this insulin with me?” •DV can reduce errors by 30% if done correctly •Two clinicians separately check; •Alone and apart from one another; •Then compare results; •For prescribing, dispensing and verifying •DV is inconsistently practiced (Brannan, 2010) •Errors occur despite DV (Armitage, 2008) •DV becomes superficial routine task (Smetzer, 2003) •Staff aren’t really doing independent double verification •Staff treat DV as a mindless robotic rote task •Deviance from ideal practice has been normalized •Staff cannot articulate prevented errors •Every insulin error has been in the DV era •40% of SQ insulin doses are 1 unit •All our orders were in paper charts •We did the transcribing/decoding •Before pharmacist’s prospective review of orders •Before automated dispensing cabinets •Before barcode medication administration •Before POC blood glucose testing •Before 1/3rd of our patients were diabetic “Our safety consulting staff recommends independent double checks for IV but not SQ insulin, because these almost certainly will not be properly conducted due to volume of doses needing a check” “We are fine if any individual nurse giving subcutaneous insulin wants to ask for a check by a second individual, but we don't believe it should be a requirement in most situations.” – Michael Cohen, April 2013 “Independent double-checks must be strategically placed for just a few high-alert medications” •It’s required by JCAHO, Title 22, CMS, etc •That’s the way I was trained •Insulin is a “high alert” medication. •Patients die from insulin overdoses! •Two heads are better than one •Better to do something than do nothing. •Everyone else is doing it •We’ve always done it that way •It’s policy •We don’t want to stop for the wrong reasons •Reduces the number of distractions and interruptions during medication administration •Keeps nurses and patients together •Allow nurses to practice to the full extent of their licensure (IOM, 2011) •Avoid waste in all its forms including wasted thought (IOM, 2001) Volume of SQ Insulin Doses vs. Time of Day, 1 Week/Unit 160 140 140 120 100 100 88 80 70 60 40 20 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 “When you need me to double-verify your insulin, I’m in the middle of giving mine” •Patient Safety •No change in glycemia profiles pre- and postintervention •No change in self-reported ADE pattern •Nurse Satisfaction •Reduced interruptions, especially during medication passes •More time with patients •RN confidence in process •Cost Avoidance •Waste reduction •Explained rationale for change •Reducing distractions/interruptions •Made DV voluntary for SQ insulin •A few continue DV •Instructed RN in procedure for BCMA override, documentation •Observed RN give SQ insulin dose •Follow-up visits over a month Process (def.) A series of steps leading to a result 1. Reduce the number of steps in the process. 2. Increase the reliability of individual process steps. Process A Process B Process C Process D Step 1 99% 99% 99% 99% Step 2 --- 99% 99% 99% Step 3 --- --- 99% 99% Step 4 --- --- --- 99% 99% 98% 97% 96% Overall Reliability Forcing Functions Fixing Systems Constraints Automation Computerization Protocols & Order Sets Double Checks Rules and Policies Education Fixing People Total Hours in DV Activity (1.5 - 3” per DV event) 112,516 events Estimated Interruptions (4:1 ratio med pass : interruption) Estimated Clinical Errors Induced by DV (+12.7% risk per) Annual Cost of DV-Induced Error (1% harmful errors, $8750 ea) 2812 - 5625 28,129 3772 $330,500 Interruptions during medication pass, self-reported (pre) 95% Interruptions during medication pass, self-reported (post) 14% Agree/strongly agree discontinuing DV ↑ patient safety risk 5%