Transcript Document

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
AND
UTILITES MANAGEMENT
Louis Stokes Cleveland, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center
JCAHO Environment of Care Series
Fiscal Year 2009
Equipment Management is an
important part of the
Environment of Care. The
following are some of the key
points of Equipment
Management.
Selecting and Acquiring Medical Equipment
Equipment Incidents
Safe Medical Devices Act
Equipment Training/Competency Verification
WORK ORDER SYSTEM
The work order system is used when either medical equipment or utility
equipment needs repair. Service Chiefs are responsible for requesting
engineering work in accordance with MCP 138-008, “Engineering Services”
and establishing follow-up controls within their service to assist Engineering
Service in the completion of requested work. Most work orders are done
using the Electronic Work Order System on VISTA. During business hours,
emergency work orders should be phoned in to Engineering Service at
extension 4164.
Electronic work request
1 Request Electronic Work
2 Edit Electronic Work
3 Electronic Work Order Status
4 Incomplete Work Orders
Work Order Menu Options
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Request Electronic Work Order
Edit Electronic Work Order
Electronic Work Order Status Check
Incomplete Work Orders
Work Order Menu Key Features
Enter work order at any workstation.
On-line access to the status of work order.
ADPAC can issue work order menu.
Utility Systems
Engineering Service is responsible
for ensuring the proper function,
testing, and maintenance of all utilities.
Supervisors are responsible for
immediately reporting all incidents
involving, or failures of utilities to
Engineering Service.
Each Service must have specific
utilities outage plans.
Oxygen Systems
The oxygen distribution system in the hospital makes it easy
to supply medical oxygen to patients who need it. In the event
of an emergency such as a fire, staff may shutoff oxygen
valves in the corridor at the direction of the fire department.
The oxygen distribution system does not rely on electrical
power to deliver oxygen to patients. Bottled oxygen is
provided by AMMS, SPD Section.
Oxygen System
Oxygen is supplied to many rooms
through a central system using
piping to outlets at the bedside. On
units using piped oxygen, staff
should know the location of the
medical gas and vacuum system
zone valves.
These are found in the corridor wall
and should be labeled to indicate the
rooms which are served.
Rooms 4444, 4445, 4446, 4447
If there is a failure with the oxygen system, cylinders
such as E-tanks are provided by AMMS, SPD Section.
Oxygen System
It is unlikely that the oxygen system will be
involved in a fire. Most fires involving patient
oxygen have occurred at or near the end of
the tubing. Disconnecting the tubing at the
outlet will remove the oxygen from the fire. In
some severe fires, it may be necessary to
turn off the oxygen at the valve that controls
the flow to one or several rooms. In a fire
such as this, your first concern is to remove
the patients from the smoke zone to a safe
area.
The area control valves should only be turned off by
order of the fire department.
Painting Policy
Engineering Service will try and
honor work orders to repaint peeling
paint. However, the the following
jobs have priority:
•Painting as part of an area
renovation project.
•Painting as part of a management
approved 5-year painting plan.
Equipment Management Program
Barcode
Test
In order to have an effective equipment
management program, three things
must occur prior to using a new piece
of medical equipment on a patient:
AMMS establishes an inventory record
and applies a barcode label.
Acceptance testing by Biomedical
Engineering is performed.
Train
Operator training is conducted on the
operation, safe use and user maintenance
requirements.
Equipment Management Program
Users can determine the status of equipment calibration,
maintenance and safety by examining the inspection sticker.
When users find an out-of-date sticker, enter an electronic
work order.
Possible location of inspection sticker
Equipment Management Program
Prior to requesting repair service for medical equipment or a
patient bed which was assigned to a patient who was in
infection isolation, the equipment must be cleaned with an
approved disinfectant.
Emergency Situations
Red telephones are for emergencies.
They are a direct line to the
operators.
Emergency Power
Did you know that the red outlets have power
during normal operations and when the
emergency generator is operating?
Reporting Utility System Failure After Hours
Utility system failure which occur after administrative hours
should be reported to the boiler plant Wade Park at extension
4180 or Brecksville at extension 6184. They are trained to
handle emergency situations.
Know Your Responsibilities – for equipment and
power failures
Every supervisor should conduct an annual training needs
assessment on each employee. If an employee and his
supervisor agree that the employee knows how to operate the
equipment he is required to operate to do his job, no additional
training is required.
You may wish to review emergency
procedures when equipment or
utilities fail, clinical intervention
associated with equipment or utility
failures, and how to request medical
equipment or utility system repairs.
Patient Safety Goals Related to Environment of Care
Goal #1: Improve the Safety of Using Infusion Pumps
The unintended flow of medication through an IV is known
as "free-flow." Uncontrolled free-flow of IV fluids and
drugs after removal of IV administration sets from infusion
pumps may have a tragic outcomes.
Action: Use only equipment protected against “free flow.”
We checked all IV pumps and all are protected against free flow.
Patient Safety Goals Related to Environment of Care
Goal #2: Improve the Effectiveness of Clinical Alarm Systems
Implement regular preventive maintenance and testing of alarm systems.
Assure that alarms are activated with appropriate settings
and are sufficiently audible with respect to distances and
competing noise within the unit.
Issues
Technical - historical malfunctions.
User Issues - Staff familiarity, understanding what various
alarms mean, awareness of alarm enabled/disabled status.
Environmental - High ambient noise, layouts that muffle
sound, similar sounding alarms, remoteness from caregivers,
too many alarms to distinguish high and low priority alarms
leading to caregiver tune-out.
INITIAL EQUIPMENT INSPECTIONS
Regardless of how medical equipment is brought into the
medical center for use on patients, prior to initial use,
Biomedical Engineering inspects all medical equipment that is
brought into the medical center. Medical equipment may be
purchased, rented, leased, on a use agreement, borrowed,
clinical trial, it must be inspected by Biomedical Engineering
and the clinical staff must be trained on its operation before it
can be used with a patient.
When equipment wobbles,
smokes, heats up, or gives
inaccurate results you need to:
Tag and remove the equipment
from service.
Report the problem to their
supervisor and Engineering
Service for repair.
Prior to requesting repair service
for wheelchairs, medical
equipment or a bed that was
assigned to a patient who was in
infection isolation, the following
precaution is taken:
User makes sure the
equipment is cleaned with
an approved disinfectant.
Congratulations, you have
completed the Medical
Equipment and Utilities
Management Training
To continue hit your enter key and follow the prompts to take the test.