Nurse Leaders Should Champion Peer Review
Physicians have been doing it for decades, but nursing has been slow to adopt peer review as a quality of care imperative. To avoid being left behind, it's time nurse leaders added peer review to their strategic plans.
Nursing peer review operates similarly to physician peer review. Following a quality of care issue, the incident is reviewed by a committee of nursing peers to determine the reasons behind the incident and whether anything can be learned from it. This is different to root cause analysis, which is multidisciplinary, much more involved, and usually occurs after an untoward patient outcome. Nursing peer review is nurses' version of ongoing individual performance evaluation and the process often identifies system failures.
Nursing peer review can identify other issues that relate to organizational performance improvement in two important ways. First, when looking at cases, you may uncover system issues that need to be addressed by the hospital's performance improvement program. Second, in evaluating individual nurse performance, you may find issues that relate to how care is provided by a specialty or by the entire staff. In these situations, nursing should use the hospital's performance improvement structure to best decide how the issue should be addressed.
I spoke with Laura Harrington, senior nurse consultant at the Greeley Company, a division of HCPro, Inc. in Marblehead, MA, about how nursing peer review benefits organizations and why it's worth adopting.
Harrington told of a case that had come before a hospital's nursing peer review committee. The admitting orders had been written for a patient, but a bed wasn't free, so the patient waited in the ED for hours. The admitting order had included a medication that was urgent for the patient to receive, but the patient did not receive the medication until hours later when he was finally on the unit.
The case was reviewed by the nursing peer review council, and it was discovered that there was no policy for ED nurses to initiate admitting orders, which were done on the unit. In this case, the organization identified the lack of policy and changed it so that ED nurses could start admitting orders for urgent medications or procedures.
Harrington says peer review provides nursing with a structure to look at issues when there is a quality of care question and examine the reasons behind it. But successful adoption needs nurse leader backing and support. There are untold competing priorities for nurse leaders' time, but Harrington says it is worth making nursing peer review a priority. "What it really comes down to is this will benefit everyone. It's a win-win for nursing, for the hospital, and for the patient," she says.
Nursing peer review provides an opportunity to learn from mistakes and to improve patient care. It provides a real-time evaluation of care, so changes can be made almost immediately. And by evaluating processes, it decreases the possibility of future process failures.
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jjmartin (2/18/2010 at 5:11 PM)
jjmartinrn,call jc-satx.
Dale (2/1/2010 at 2:42 PM)
Peer Review??? The RNs are to busy eating their young to be concerned with Peer review. I have never seen a "profession" so disjointed. No teamwork, no accountability, and no care attitudes have flooded the once caring "profession". One reason for this is that a RN can be 2, 3, 4 year degrees. Has never made sense and still doesn't that each of them are titled Registered Nurse. Give me a break.
Dale G. BSN, RN
jjmartinrn (1/21/2010 at 2:30 AM)
Hendren wrote "Nursing peer review is nurses' version of ongoing individual performance evaluation and the process ofter identifies system failures." First and foremost nursing peer review is a legal process which many nurses forget. No nurse should go before peer review without having sought legal council, to do so is foolish and under estimates the legal consequences of this process. The next step after peer review is state board review, even if peer review decides not to send your case to state board the DON can elect to refer the case on. Many nurses make the mistake of thinking; if I get an attorney I will look guilty. This is not true; no person goes into court without legal representation. In regards to physicians peer review the individual being called before peer review has the right to sue the individuals serving on the peer review committee. Quality of care is an important issue without any question. However this article fails to address the legal aspects of peer review. The strategic infrastructure of a health care system should address quality of care. Industries throughout the world are doing just that and it is not through peer review.