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Kaiser Permanente: A Journey in In-Situ Medical Simulation

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Title: Kaiser Permanente: A Journey in In-Situ Medical Simulation


1
Kaiser Permanente A Journey in In-Situ
Medical Simulation
  • Stanford University, 2008
  • Paul Preston, MD
  • Permanente Medical Group
  • Regional Safety Educator

2
Thanks for the Invitation!
  • Without your leadership, we wouldnt have a
    program
  • You keep sending us great people who ask for this
  • I hope we can deliver
  • Ever bring coals to Newcastle?

3
Agenda
  • Simulation - its role in safe, reliable care
  • Simulation outside of Kaiser Permanente
  • Adapting Simulation to Kaiser Permanente
  • How this is relating to our other systemic goals
  • How we may be able to measure this (Help!)
  • Our vision for the future
  • Have fun!

4
The Start of a Journey
  • What you need here is a Doctor who thinks like
    an Engineer
  • Sometimes I wonder if were training exotic fish
    then putting them into the same polluted pond

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Why is he wearing a tie?
7
Kaiser Permanente Program
Founded 1945 Largest non-profit HMO 8.3 million
members Headquarters Oakland, CA 30
hospitals 431 medical offices
Northwest Region
Northern California
Ohio Region
Colorado Region
Mid-Atlantic Region
Southern California
Georgia Region
Hawaii Region
141,909 employees, 12,012 physicians
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9
Accident Causation
Latent Failures
Attention Distractions
Incomplete Procedures
Deferred Maintenance
Inadequate Training
Clumsy Technology
Triggers
Psychological Precursors
Unsafe Acts
Organization
Team
Accident
Individual
Defenses
Technical
Modified from Reason, 1990
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  • Core Mission- Prepaid, Non-Profit, Comprehensive
    Healthcare
  • Great Health Maintenance, World Class Hospitals
  • NOT Research, Teaching, Cutting Edge
  • Interesting History- Why does Kaiser have
    hospitals?

13
Sim Champion Building Support....
14
The Latest Crisis
  • Report criticizes Kaiser for lack of action
  • Federal inspectors fault its Fresno hospital's
    response to complaints about a doctor who
    allegedly fatally botched two deliveries.
  • CARMICHAEL, Calif. -- A Kaiser Permanente plastic
    surgeon remained in jail Wednesday accused of
    inappropriate sexual contact with his patients
    and keeping a cache of weapons at his Carmichael
    home, police reported.
  • Sacramento County Sheriff's Department officials
    went to the home of ... looking for evidence of
    alleged sex crimes.
  • But officials found a rocket-propelled grenade
    and at least five machine guns at the Empire
    Court residence, said R.L. Davis, spokesman for
    the sheriff's department.

15
Other High Priority (and worthwhile) initiatives
  • Electronic Medical Record- 4 Billion- data
    potential?
  • New and seismic facilities
  • Service and access goals
  • Efficient throughput, well designed facilities
  • Mandate to ensure and oversee competencies of
    providers
  • Multiple efforts to teach CRM and Human Factors
    in multiple settings
  • Some question about how to get these behaviors to
    take root
  • Domain based safety initiatives
  • Perinatal Safety
  • Med/Surg Rescue
  • Surgical Team Communications

16
Life on Med/Surg Ward
  • How often is there a process failure?
  • Every 70 minutes
  • 94 of these, RN tries to work around
  • 6 of these the problem is reported
  • ? How often it is fixed
  • This is deeply programmed into healthcare
    providers
  • The Problem is NOT careless people messing up a
    perfect system.

17
Journey So Far.
  • Several Stages of Denial-Acceptance-Action
  • Better understanding of the problem
  • Systems
  • Communications
  • Fundamental skill and judgment deficits
  • What Do We REALLY Need To Do to become Reliable?
  • Consistent, reliable processes for the things we
    can anticipate
  • (Highly Reliable Surgical Team Briefings, Pure
    CRM)
  • Anticipate, detect and manage the unexpected
  • By the way, we better get some data to show
  • Frequency and cost of harm
  • Progress

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19
Demings Lenses for Simulation
  • System
  • Great Probe for systemic learning
  • Psychology
  • Works very well for frontline
  • Data
  • Excellent PDSA... Less well established for
    systems
  • Variation

20
Recent Sim Observations....
  • It Works!
  • It Works Better if Everyone Actually Does It!!
  • Amazing growth in the field
  • It addresses safety and competency issues that we
    cant get to otherwise, and this matters to KP
  • It will be required?!?
  • It only takes 3 days to do this
  • It doesnt have to be super hi tech
  • We have unique opportunities in KP

21
Simulation- How do we answer these questions?
  • How many times have you done this before?
  • Do You have to manage emergencies?
  • Do your teams have to manage emergencies?
  • Do you practice as teams for these emergencies?
  • Do you routinely debrief your drills and your
    real events?
  • Would you learn from a near miss? Would your
    systems change?

22
What Is Our Aim at Kaiser?
  • If mistakes happen (and they will) we can trap
    them by working together as a Team
  • We can build systems that are safer
  • Everyone becomes the expert on Safety
  • We cannot become error free, but we can create a
    system that is harm free- and this will require
    testing of systems and training of providers

22
23
Error Reduction and TrappingA Cultural Change
  • Ask for help when overloaded
  • Get a second opinion when in doubt.
  • Honor others who call for help
  • Wisdom, not weakness
  • It is more important for my patient to do well
    than for me to look slick

23
24
Simulation its role in providing safe reliable
care
  • Improve patient safety without endangering actual
    patients and to practice high risk, low volume
    situations where error is more likely to occur
  • Practice without risk, curricular
    standardization, and pedagogic efficiency
  • Imitates reality, offers almost limitless
    opportunities to have things go wrong, and
    provides corrective feedback as a guide to future
    action
  • Migrate the basic training of hazardous
    procedures from the patient until skill is
    attained
  • Address skills, communication issues that will
    not be fixed (and may get worse) with automation

25
Simulation its role in providing safe reliable
care
  • How do we do this better?
  • Appreciate that highly skilled people, trying
    hard to do the right thing, will make mistakes
    in complex environments how do we manage those
    errors and keep everyone safe?
  • Shift our focus from who did it to how do fix
    it so the same problem will not reoccur?
  • Create an environment of psychological safety
    where everyone and anyone feels comfortable to
    raise a concern
  • NEVER assume safety, always take a minute to
    assure it

26
Simulation its role in providing safe reliable
care
  • Proven Training Techniques Human Factors
  • Skills that build teams, improve communication,
    reduce and trap the errors that will always occur
  • Briefings, Assertion, Situational Awareness
  • Very trainable
  • Measurable
  • Reduce accidents
  • Improve Staff Retention

27
Causes of accidents in medicine
  • 70 due to Human Factors (preventable?)
  • Not lack of medical knowledge
  • But problems with transferring theoretical
    knowledge into actions under the real world
    conditions of a hospital setting
  • Problems with complexity
  • Team, Communication

28
Perinatal Patient Safety Project
  • Focus
  • Human factors training
  • Multidisciplinary team for problem solving
  • Recurring clinical problems
  • Recurring organizational systems problems
  • Just Culture statement
  • Provider and staff support
  • Transfer successful practices
  • Critical Events Team Training (CETT)

29
Reoccurring Clinical Problems
  • Inability to recognize and respond to fetal
    distress,
  • Inability to effect timely cesarean birth for
    fetal distress,
  • Inability to resuscitate a depressed infant,
  • Inappropriate use of pitocin, leading to uterine
    hyperstimulation, uterine rupture, fetal
    distress.
  • Inappropriate use of forceps / vacuum leading to
    fetal trauma and shoulder dystocia.
  • If you get these things right, you eliminate 80
    of perinatal liability claims- Eric Knox
  • MMI Company data of 250 hospitals over 10 years

30
High Reliability Organization
  • Safety is the highest priority
  • Preoccupation with what could fail
  • Open environment to discuss error
  • Everyone encouraged to speak up about hazards
  • Rewards for safe actions
  • Training for hazardous situations
  • What high risk industry would expect great team
    performance, free of errors, without practice?

31
SimulationTraining
32
Can Simulation Help Us become Harm Free?
  • Team based emergency Fetal Heart Rate and
    emergency training- entire care team
  • Apgars less than or equal to 6 at 5 minutes 86.6
    /10,000 births to 44.6 /10,000 births
  • Hypoxic encephalopathy 27.3 /10,000 births to
    13.6/10,000 live births
  • 70 reduction in brachial plexus injuries with
    shoulder dystocia
  • Draycott, T. et. al., BJOG 2006, 2007

33
Patient Safety Program/simulation started in
Perinatal
Roll out dates by KP Region
Q1 2004
Q1 2006
Q2 2005
Q2 2003
Q3 2005
Q1 2004
Q3 2006
Q3 2004
34
More on Kaiser
  • Risk data as driver of simulation
  • Remarkable front line support
  • Systems approach
  • Training of entire team, in situ
  • Probe for systems weakness, strengths
  • Linkage to operations

35
Unique to Kaiser just this month
  • Roseville- 30 new trainers, plan to test new
    Mom/Baby facility before opening
  • Used to test new facilities, services
  • Cardiac Cath Lab and North Valley
  • Santa Clara- exhaustive testing of new cardiac
    cath and surgical capabilities
  • I couldnt believe how much we found on the
    first day, and how much better we look now.

36
Roseville Recent Critical Events Training
37
Santa Clara Recent Critical Events Training
38
Unique to Kaiser just this month
  • Sim Demonstration to Board of Directors
  • A Pilot is one of our Directors
  • Sudden VFib arrest, in the Boardroom
  • You cant die now, we have Valentines dinner
    reservations....
  • Sim at 60th TPMG Anniversary
  • Working Simulation into future inpatient EMR
    deployment

39
Best Practice Learned from CETT Team Roles
Positions
  • 1 Airway Manager
  • Anesthesiologist/CRNA

2 Airway Assistant RT draw ABGs
6 Chest compressions
3 Bedside Nurse/Floor RN briefs team, IV, labs,
dispense items, CPR
7 Procedure MD chest tubes, ABGs, etc.
4 Critical Care RN prepare
drugs,
defib., ID monitor rhythm
8 Recorder RN
5 Team Leader
40
Back Counter/Cupboards
Back Counter/Cupboards
Baby Warmer
RN 3
Back Table
Bucket/Lap Bags
OR Table
RN 1
RN 2
Bovie/Suction
OR 1
Anesthesia
41
Some Considerations at Kaiser
  • We loved (and have greatly benefited from) what
    YOU and colleagues were doing
  • Multidisciplinary- target the entire team
  • Single discipline efforts less likely to be
    funded or change the culture
  • Tight linkage to organizational needs
  • Places where communication, lack of training lead
    to measured harm
  • Align with other efforts
  • CRM, Human Factors for Routine Communications

42
Some Considerations at Kaiser
  • Limited Resources
  • Work In Situ, no dedicated lab
  • Intermediate Fidelity of Simulation Gear, but
  • Great fidelity of environment
  • Not the final validation study of simulation as
    a modality
  • Fix the Problem using a lot of interventions at
    once

43
Critical Event Team Training ( CETT) Training
Strategy
  • Training on
  • Human factors and team skills
  • Reality and types of Human Errors
  • Orientation to Simulator
  • Intermediate fidelity, in-situ simulation
    training
  • Actual occurrences used as basis for scenarios
  • Focus on apparent weaknesses in our system
  • Situations where assessment, communication are
    important
  • Blame free, confidential training

44
Other Key Crisis Management Skills
  • Declaring emergency
  • Early
  • Clearly
  • Leadership, optimal team structure
  • Attention allocation
  • Task prioritization and distribution
  • Effective, efficient resource use
  • Clear orders, cross check and verification

45
Make Routine Debriefing Part of Team Culture
  • Look at routine and critical operations every day
  • Recognize how regular debriefing is key to unit
    safety
  • Practice skills on the CETT day
  • Learn a constructive, blame free approach
  • This is working in Crash Cesareans, Rapid
    Response, shoulder dystocias- structured tools
    are being developed to capture and report data

46
Link to Operations, Other Efforts
  • Start with human factors
  • Build a multidisciplinary team
  • Charged to improve their unit
  • Train entire teams
  • All providers and staff a few confederates
  • Experienced providers
  • Direct linkage to unit leaders
  • Purpose Find and fix system problems- The Unit
    Manager records the debriefings

47
CRITICAL EVENT DRILLSWhat are they?
  • Lifelike
  • Real time
  • Normal noise - confusion - resources
  • Situation must be diagnosed and managed by team
    exactly as in real life
  • You will be doing your usual job at all times

48
Variety
  • Rare and common scenarios
  • Long and short
  • Fast or slow evolving
  • Everyone has a key role
  • But not in every scenario!
  • Confederates as family, patients
  • Carpet pad, pea soup as low tech aids
  • Cover this in briefing.
  • Actual environment REALLY adds credibility

49
How To Look Great (and rescue your patients)
  • Optimum Location, people and equipment
  • Brief the Team
  • Know the environment, clearly delegate tasks
  • Clear Leader- (This may change!)
  • Regain Situational Awareness
  • Chaos is Never OK

50
Future Vision
  • Expansion into other clinical departments
  • Highly Reliable Surgical Team and Reliable
    Emergency Departments
  • 2008 National Quality and Brand Conference
  • Simulation Minicourse and KP Medical Simulation
    kick-off
  • Simulation available, funded and required
    throughout career

51
Future Vision- continued
  • Link performance improvement with simulation
    activities
  • Kaiser Simulation Collaborative
  • Network/collaborative of simulation experts and
    users
  • Toolkit to support simulation implementation
    within Kaiser
  • Library of simulation scenarios

52
Data...
  • What is our aim?
  • How will we know the change is an improvement?
  • What will we try?

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Our IDEAL Data Set
  • About 8 measures
  • 2 outcome, 5 process, 1-2 balancing
  • Improvement and Accountability
  • Run over time, rapid cycle, feedback to front
    line teams and leadership
  • Sustainable- forever!
  • Anyone can see how we are doing

58
What Might We Have In Perinatal?
  • Outcome
  • Med Mal- Has Limits, but CAN strongly argue for
    Simulation
  • We seem to be gaining ground here...
  • Physiologic Intermediate Data
  • Complications- Bleeding, brachial plexus injury,
    encephalopathy, infection, Retained Objects,
    Infxn
  • Current Benchmarks- C/S rate, 3d degree
    laceration, infant death, VBAC- why these?
  • Process
  • Trigger Tools Concepts- Ascension, IHI, AHRQ, AOI
    scores-ADT, labs, pharmacy-Higher Capture than
    Reporting!
  • General Anesthesia
  • IHI type bundles- compliance with these
  • Induction EGA, Pelvimetry, FHR (NICHD), hyperstim

59
What Might We Have In Perinatal?
  • Process
  • FHR Documentation/ Review/Action/Training
  • Evidence Based Training Programs
  • Instrumental, Shoulder Dystocia, Stat C/S
  • Selected Chart Reviews, timing of Stat C/S
  • Human Factors, Safety Attitude Surveys
  • Active Safety Team, Board Rounds
  • Surgical Counts, Briefings
  • Observational Data
  • Time on divert, cancelled inductions
  • Systems Problems Found and Fixed
  • Glitch Book Data

60
Process Measure Results
61
Perinatal- Balancing?
  • Care Experience
  • Cesarean Rates!
  • Timeliness of Cesarean Sections
  • Really 2 very different processes
  • STAT C/S Rescue
  • Elective C/S Throughput
  • LOS
  • Staffing

62
Unique Kaiser Opportunities
  • Extraordinary Leadership from National and
    Regional Risk- equipment, time, support
  • Appreciation for systems- role of simulation in
    testing facilities, fixing systemic problems,
    training new teams, hospital and tech design
  • Unified systems
  • Outcome data that others truly envy
  • Which we need to use much more!
  • A remarkable cadre of trainers
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