A good family health history is important in predicting future medical needs, but it's hugely underused. But now the government will beging offering a free new service to help people compile one at home, e-mail it to relatives who can fill in the gaps, and even pop it straight into their doctors' computers. The goal is to create a family health tree that will help genetics specialists look for patterns of inherited illnesses that can provide a powerful window on someone's brewing health risks.
This story in a series from the Dallas Morning News says that hospital companies in Texas, many of which collect millions in state and federal funds, operate with minimal public disclosure of deficiencies. Texas keeps information on complaints and inspections largely private because influential healthcare corporations want it that way, and Texas legislators have obliged, according to the article. As a result, it is next to impossible for the public to determine whether state enforcement works properly, critics say.
Efforts to use information technology to improve U.S. healthcare will fall short of the potential seen by health leaders and could even set back the cause, according to a National Research Council report. A committee of academic and industry experts found the information systems at eight U.S. medical centers noted for leadership in information technology failed to provide timely, efficient, safe, and patient-centered care. "The committee observed a number of success stories in the implementation of healthcare IT," the report noted. "But although seeing these successes was encouraging, they fall far short, even in the aggregate, of what is needed to support the Institute of Medicine's vision of quality healthcare."
Learn from your mistakes. That ubiquitous tenet of quality improvement theory inevitably surfaces in conversations between supervisors and subordinates, parents and children, coaches and players . . . and healthcare leaders and caregivers. That's the whole premise of adverse event reporting—to document errors and other flaws in patient care to help create safer practices and prevent those adverse events from happening again.
So do U.S. hospitals generally have adverse event reporting systems in place? Yes, according to an extensive new study. Are they actually using the data to effect improvements? Well, that's where the trouble starts.
The study, "Adverse Event Reporting Practices by U.S. Hospitals: Results of a National Survey," found that centralized systems for collecting reports on adverse events are almost universal—more than 94% of some 1,600 hospitals reported having such a system in some form. But the survey—funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and conducted by researchers from AHRQ, the RAND Corporation, and The Joint Commission—also provided some less-than-encouraging findings:
Although nearly every hospital reported having an adverse event reporting system, only 21% fully distribute and consider summary reports on the reported events.
Slightly less than a third of hospitals have established environments that support adverse event reporting. The study defines a "supportive environment" as one that allows for anonymous reporting for all adverse event reporters and one that always keeps identities private for reporters who do choose to identify themselves.
Only 13% have broad staff involvement in adverse event reporting. The study found that 96% of reports are submitted by nursing staff members.
The bottom line is that the "learning from mistakes" part of the equation is largely getting lost. "There's a lot of reporting going on, but not much being done with the information generated," says James Battles, PhD, senior service fellow for patient safety at AHRQ and one of the study's researchers.
OK . . . so why not? In a competitive healthcare landscape of increasingly savvy consumers—a landscape in which quality is supposed to be a market differentiator—why wouldn't a hospital want to actively utilize such data to improve its care processes, if only for its own self-interest? There are plenty of answers to that question, of course, but the overarching reason may be the most basic of all: fear.
"One of the big fears we get is that in many cases, hospitals have used event reporting for disciplinary action," says Battles. "We've got to create a more supportive environment where the information is used for learning, not for discipline or risk management issues." What's more, Battles adds, there's an "increased fear of sharing information that could be used against the institution."
One glimmer of hope in mitigating that fear, Battles says, may be patient safety organizations. In November, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services published the final rule for the establishment of PSOs, initially authorized by the Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Act of 2005. The rule goes into effect later this month. PSOs are designed to remove the fear of disciplinary action or legal liability felt by both clinicians and healthcare organizations by providing a confidential place to which providers can report adverse events and other information for analysis. PSOs can then offer feedback to provider organizations for quality improvements.
Whether PSOs can significantly improve healthcare quality and safety remains to be seen. I suspect the reluctance to utilize reporting systems may be deeply ingrained in many cases, so the promise of anonymity and protection from sanctions may need some time to take hold. But even small steps toward a more productive use of adverse event data would be welcome. "The big push moving forward is how to make these hospitals' event reporting systems more useful as a learning tool," says Battles. "It shouldn't be just an exercise to fill a requirement of accreditation."
Jay Moore is managing editor for HealthLeaders magazine. He can be reached at jmoore@healthleadersmedia.com.
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This New York Times article examines the question of whether part of the informed-consent process is doctors having an ethical obligation to tell patients if they are more likely to survive, be cured, live longer, or avoid complications by going to Hospital A instead of Hospital B.
Millions of Californians with limited English proficiency now have the right to an interpreter from their commercial health and dental plans. The right was made possible by a first-in-the-nation law aimed at dismantling the language barriers that get in the way of good medicine. The new regulation is being widely hailed as a milestone in reducing mistakes because of miscommunication.