About 35 mannequins were strapped into car seats or gurneys, then ferried across the city last week as Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh simulated its coming move to its new campus. More than 200 people are expected to take part in the real move May 2, when 150 to 200 patients are transported about 3 miles to the $625 million campus.
Proposals to step up state inspection of outpatient surgical centers and some doctors' offices in Nevada has drawn concerns from the doctors' lobby, which said the regulations went too far and could force some physicians to stop offering pain medication. Larry Matheis, executive director of the Nevada State Medical Association, told a joint meeting of the Assembly and Senate health committees that the increased regulation as written might not be practical and urged a slower approach. The proposals are a response to a hepatitis C outbreak in Las Vegas that led to the largest patient notification in U.S. history.
The nation's largest group of emergency physicians have condemned University of Chicago's plans to divert some patients from its emergency room, saying the plan comes "dangerously close" to violating federal law and calling for a congressional investigation. The hospital's initiative is aimed at clearing its ER of patients with non-urgent injuries and illnesses by redirecting them to community hospitals and clinics. The University maintains its Urban Health Initiative is about getting patients the right treatment at the appropriate location amid a tough economic climate and that the plan does not violate the law.
Your hospital is going to harm a patient. I know you don't want to hear that, but unfortunately it's true. It might be an improper medication dosage. A surgical infection. A nasty fall on a slippery floor. Whatever the case, no matter what extensive safeguards a provider organization implements, when human beings are involved, true perfection is not attainable. Errors might be minimized or even rendered almost nonexistent, but they will happen. Sooner or later.
And then comes the complicated part: fessing up. Error disclosure historically has been a touchy subject for many providers leery of legal repercussions and fearful that disclosure generally can cause more harm than good. While such concerns persist in some circles, hospitals and health systems have certainly made strides in their efforts to discuss medical mistakes with patients and families. Still, according to at least one study, one component of the disclosure process remains lacking: nurse involvement.
A survey of roughly 100 nurses found that they were often excluded when physicians talked to patients about serious errors. Or to be more precise, they might have disclosed their own errors to patients, but participating in the discussion of others' mistakes was another story. The consequences of not having nurses involved in the disclosure process, contends the study in last month's issue of The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety, affect patient and nurse alike. The patient doesn't get as complete of an explanation and is left with more questions. And later, when the nurse is still attending to the patient while the rest of the team has moved on, the nurse appears evasive when he or she can't answer those follow-up questions because he or she wasn't included in disclosure planning sessions.
The study's contentions make sense in many ways—nurses shouldn't be put in comprising situations because they haven't been given adequate information, and patients deserve a complete explanation when a mistake occurs, not a partial one. At the same time, though, it seems to me that having multiple people explaining an error could actually be confusing for a patient if the caregivers have different assessments of the situation. I've thankfully never had to hear a provider's explanation of a medical error, but I'm trying to picture myself sitting in a hospital in that exact situation. Would I rather see and hear one person explaining the situation to me, or would I rather see and hear a group of people? And another question: Are all nurses trained in talking to patients and families about serious mistakes?
Such training is actually part of the study's recommendations, along with a team-based disclosure process that follows specific guidelines. Ultimately, as long as the patient hears a compassionate, accurate version of what happened, the question of how many caregivers actually participate in the discussion with the patient may be less important than the way caregivers communicate with each other: what happened, why it happened, and what can be done to keep it from happening again. That's a discussion in which every caregiver should play a part.
Jay Moore is managing editor for HealthLeaders magazine. He can be reached at jmoore@healthleadersmedia.com.
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Bloodstream infections caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus have dropped 50% in the last decade for one high-risk medical procedure, according to a new study. The finding, although limited to a single procedure in the intensive-care units of hospitals surveyed—insertion of a central line, or catheter, into a major blood vessel—runs contrary to the perception of MRSA as an out-of-control hospital superbug.
Bloodstream infections caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus have dropped 50% in the last decade for one high-risk medical procedure, according to a new study. The finding, although limited to a single procedure in the intensive-care units of hospitals surveyed—insertion of a central line, or catheter, into a major blood vessel—runs contrary to the perception of MRSA as an out-of-control hospital superbug.
Drug-resistant staph infections are more common in Illinois hospital patients than previously thought, according to new data from the Illinois Hospital Association. But the overwhelming majority of hospital patients with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, were already infected before being admitted, the data suggests. The findings highlight how prevalent the drug-defying bacteria have become in Illinois communities as well as the importance of measures to stem the spread of infections.