Transcript Slide 1

Why are deteriorating patients
not recognised or not acted upon
and what can we do about it?
Kate Beaumont
Strategy Advisor
NPSA
‘The top priority, top priority is
always safety’
‘It doesn’t cost a fortune to have
patient safety’
Secretary of State for Health – Alan
Johnson.
House of Commons 15th October 2007
The top priority
but why is it so difficult to recognise and
respond appropriately to deterioration?
Launch of
NPSA Report
Recognising and
responding
appropriately to
early signs of
deterioration in
hospitalised patients
16 November 2007
Method – triangulation
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Focus groups with doctors and nurses
Semi-structured interviews with clinicians
Aggregate Root Cause Analysis
Ethnographic analysis (observational study and
interviews)
• Literature review
to seek to answer why
NPSA contributory factors classification
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Communication factors
Working conditions and environmental
factors
Task factors
Education and training factors
Patient factors
Team and social factors
Organisational factors
Equipment and resources factors
Individual factors
Management and workload – the issues
• prioritising competing demands
• value of doing observations sometimes not well
understood
• lack of strong and experienced ward leadership
From the report, Appendix 1
Checklist
Are you encouraging colleagues to see
observations as an important element of
their work?
“When staff come on duty, they’ve got several must-dos.
Patients must get their breakfast, drugs have to be given
out and staff have to prepare for 10 o’clock hospital
discharges. This is also the time to start ward rounds.
There’s a lot of pressure in the early part of morning. So
when do you fit in doing your obs?”
senior nurse
Do you have a suitably experienced ward
leader on every shift who maintains an
overview of the wellbeing of all patients?
“For some of the experienced nurses, you often hear
people talk about the 'gut feeling'… you observe, you
look closer, you question your patients. Somewhere
along the line something will give information that a
younger member of staff could overlook”
senior nurse
Communication and teamwork – the
issues
• being able to communicate information
succinctly and to make requests assertively
• good working relationships needed for
effective communication
• both nurses and doctors reluctant to seek
more senior help if they do not get the support
they need from their first level contact
Do you think communication can be improved
in relation to deteriorating patients?
Have you considered introducing a
communication tool such as SBAR or RSVP?
“Sometimes they call you and ask, ‘What do you want us to
do?’ and you’ve written it in the notes.”
junior doctor
“Doctors assume that if it’s in the medical notes nurses will
read it. But if they’re busy doing something this is not going
to be case.”
senior nurse
Monitoring and escalation procedures
– the issues
• routine observations frequently carried out
by healthcare assistants or student nurses
• Staff often did not have sufficient training to
understand the relevance of any findings and
how to communicate these onwards
effectively and promptly
Are you using physiological track and trigger
systems to monitor all patients?
Have you considered introducing colourcoded observation charts?
“A nurse may not pick up the signs because of a lack of
training or understanding. Or they might not be seeing it,
they’re writing it down and not seeing what’s in front of
them.”
staff nurse
James Reason uses the Western Mining
Corporation in Western Australia as an
exemplar of error wisdom, their motto is –
‘Take time, take charge’
Being error wise
• Accept errors can and will occur
• Assess the local constraints before embarking on a
task
• Have contingencies ready to deal with anticipated
problems
• Be prepared to seek more qualified assistance
• Overcome professional courtesy and check
colleagues’ knowledge and expertise
• Appreciate that the path to incidents is paved with
false assumptions
Feral vigilance
Conclusions and recommendations
of the report
Every acute trust should establish a ‘Deterioration Recognition Group’
which leads and coordinates efforts to
improve the safety of patients who are
vulnerable to unexpected deterioration.
The Deterioration Recognition Group can
learn from other trusts (their local equivalents)
– resources, good practice examples and
contact details are provided in the report
The Deterioration Recognition Group can
use the checklist of reflective questions
within the report to identify effective
implementation strategies sensitive to local
organisation, culture and present policies.
National Patient Safety Campaign
Making patient safety part of everyday
healthcare: a new national campaign to
encourage people and organisations in the
NHS to make patient safety part of
everything they do
Deterioration
The goal
• To reduce in-hospital cardiac arrest and mortality rate through earlier
recognition and treatment of the deteriorating patient.
• This intervention addresses six key areas relating to deterioration:
• Physiological observations should be recorded for all adult patients in acute
hospital settings.
• Physiological observations should be recorded and acted upon by staff who
have been trained to undertake these procedures and understand their
clinical relevance.
• Physiological track and trigger systems should be used.
• There should be a graded response strategy.
• An escalation protocol should be in place.
• A communication tool should be used.
“The five most
dangerous words in
health care are;
"it could never
happen here.”
Professor Sir Liam Donaldson
Active failures are like mosquitoes. They can be
swatted one by one, but they still keep coming.
The best remedies are to create more effective
defences and to drain the swamps in which
they breed.
The swamps, in this case,
are the ever present latent conditions.
James Reason
Acknowledgements
• NHS nursing and medical staff who shared their experiences in
the interviews and focus groups
• NHS risk managers who shared anonymised root cause analysis
reports
• Researchers who conducted the studies for this report: Mary DixonWoods, Anu Suokas and Richard Lilford (Ethnographic analysis),
Claire Blackett and Steve Cross (Aggregate Root Cause Analysis),
Kristina Staley and Judy Wilson (Interviews with Clinicians), Kate
Beaumont, Dagmar Luettel, Jane Carthey, Joanne Hillier, Alison
Hugget, Louise Thomas (Focus groups) and Mig Muller (Literature
review)
• Leroy Edozien, Jenny Firth-Cozens, Saxon Ridley, Charles Vincent,
Patricia Young and Suzette Woodward who helped to explore the
contributory factors
Further information can be found at:
www.npsa.nhs.uk
4 - 8 Maple Street, London, W1T 5HD
or email:
[email protected]