Title: Stop The Line Policy
1Stop The Line Policy Academic Medical Center
Initiative
2- Campus-wide Initiative
- Policy has been approved by WUSM, BJH, SLCH
- Policy is now being disseminated to all faculty
and staff - Stop The Line (STL) Advisory Panel formed
- Multi-disciplinary and inter-institutional group
formed to evaluate effectiveness of the policy
and review any case when STL is inappropriate or
inadequate -
3Stop the Line (STL) Team
WUSM Dr. Nikoleta Kolovos, PICU Dr. Chris
Carpenter, EDDr. Brian Nussenbaum,
OtolaryngologyDr. Jim Duncan, RadiologyDr.
Andrea Vannucci, AnesthesiaDr. Doug Schuerer,
TraumaDr. Mike Lane, Infectious DiseasesDr.
Robert McKinstry, RadiologySally OShea,
HRMary Taylor, Patient Safety
- BJH and SLCH
- Debbie Hendricks, BJH, Oncology
- Jody Woodward, BJH, Patient Safety
- Roz Corcoran, BJH, Patient Safety
- Mara Bollini, SLCH, Patient Safety
- Cathy Meyers, SLCH, HR
- Michael Miller, BJH HR
- April Kutheis, SLCH, OR
- Maria Fernandez, SLCH, PICU
- Betty Langin, SLCH, PACU
- Kathy Hughes, SLCH, SDS
- Advisory Panel members indicated in bold
4What is Stop the Line?
Originated from the Toyota Production
Systemtraditionally the industry standard for
excellence in production
- Built on the philosophy that every person is
responsible for the process - Shifts responsibility for quality into the hands
of team members who are empowered/expected to
speak up when problems are identified - Operates on the belief that solving quality
problems at the source improves safety and
quality - Providing a cultural shift so that every person
feels responsible for the safety (of our patients)
Jeffrey K. Liker, The Toyota Way 14 Management
Principles from the World's Greatest
Manufacturer, McGraw-Hill 2004.
5Why Stop the Line? Inherent Human Limitations
Why Stop the Line? Inherent Human Limitations
Why Stop the Line? Inherent Human Limitations
Line? Inherent Human Limitations
- Limited memory capacity we can store 5-7 pieces
of information in our short term memory - Negative effects of stress error rates, tunnel
vision - Negative influence of fatigue and other
physiological factors - Limited ability to multitask ex cell phones,
texting and driving
Courtesy Michael Leonard, MD Karen Frush, MD
Presentation at the SLCH UBJP Team Leaders
Workshop, EPNEC, May 12, 2009.
6Why Stop the Line in Our Academic Medical Center?
- Clinical medicine is an extremely complex
environment with - Surprises
- Uncertainty
- Incomplete information
- Interruptions and multi-tasking
- The overwhelming majority of untoward events
involve communication failure - e.g. wrong site surgery somebody knows theres
a problem but cant get everyone in the same
movie - The clinical environment has evolved beyond the
limitations of individual human performance
Courtesy Michael Leonard, MD Karen Frush, MD
Presentation at the SLCH UBJP Team Leaders
Workshop, EPNEC, May 12, 2009.
7Why Stop the Line? 25-40 of nurses at SLCH
reported on the Safety Attitude Questionnaire
they would be hesitant to speak up if they saw an
MD making a mistake
Concern Non-Supervisory Employees Confront the Person Supervisors Who Confront the Person
Competence of a Nurse or other Clinical Care Provider 3 16
Competence of a Physician Less than 1 Less than 1
Poor Teamwork 5 9
Disrespect or Abuse 2 5
page 7
Maxfield, D. et al. Silence Kills The Seven
Crucial Conversations for Healthcare,
VitalSmarts, 2005.
8 Safety Leadership Behaviors
- It takes inclusive leaders who
- Invite input (name/role activation)
- Are accessible (present/approachable/all ears)
- Acknowledge the limits of current knowledge
- Go first (particularly in displays of
fallibility) - Inclusive leaders lower the psychological costs
of voice and raise the psychological costs of
silence
Courtesy Michael Leonard, MD Karen Frush, MD
Presentation at the SLCH UBJP Team Leaders
Workshop, EPNEC, May 12, 2009.
9SLCH and BJH Case Examples
- A circulating nurse respectfully insisted that
the line be identified on an X-ray, obtained
for a possible retained item. - Respiratory therapist informed a fellow (after
being up all night) that they were about to
insert a chest tube in backwards. - A nurse felt a patient who had been released from
the PACU didnt look right. She worked with the
physician to re-assess the patient and order
further testing. The patient was taken back to
the OR. - A proceduralist was reminded of a patients
allergy to heparin following a request for a
heparin flush during the case.
10Stop the Line What does it mean?
- Stop the Line
- The request of any team member for clarification
or interruption of a process when s/he perceives
a significant potential threat to patient safety.
- When staff or health care providers are engaged
or are about to engage in an action believed to
be a significant threat to patient or staff
safety or - A staff member or health care provider requests
clarity regarding a non-emergency clinical
situation that may pose a significant impending
threat to safety.
11Stop the Line When to use it? When a
patients safety is thought to be at risk,
examples of which may include
- Incompatible blood is sent from the OR while an
operation is in progress. - A respiratory therapist notices that a fellow,
who had been up all night, was about to insert a
chest tube backwards. - A proceduralist requests a heparin flush in a
heparin allergic patient.
- A disagreement between members of the care team
during a time-out prior to a procedure. - The wrong side or wrong site is being
prepped/draped for an operation or procedure. - A collected pathology specimen is not in the
collection cup anymore
12Stop the Line When to use it?
Department/Unit-Specific Examples
13How to Stop the Line
Step 1 When a significant patient safety risk
is perceived, communicate in a respectful
manner the need to Stop the Line and
re-evaluate or restore patient safety Sample
Language
Could we please Stop the Line because I have
an important question and want to make sure we
are delivering safe care to this patient
14How to Stop the Line
Step 2 If the response to step one is
inadequate to restore patient safety, repeat
your request to stop the line Sample Language
(Caregiver Name), please stop we need to
review the plan/procedure/situation together
before proceeding to make sure we are delivering
safe care.
15How to Stop the Line
Step 3 If the response to Steps One and Two are
inadequate to restore patient safety,
immediately invoke the chain of command by
contacting the appropriate immediate supervisor.
- Once the immediate needs of the patient are
resolved, the supervisor shall contact the
appropriate AMC Patient Safety Departments
regarding the incident and the inadequate
response to stopping the line. - The AMC Patient Safety Departments will notify
the appropriate AMC leadership and begin the
process of investigation.
16Step 3, Continued
- The AMC organizations CMO will be notified, and,
in the event a WUSM Physician is involved, the
appropriate WUSM Department Chair. Inadequate
responses will be investigated promptly and
thoroughly as directed by the appropriate
Department Chair. - In the event that remedial measures are
necessary, they will be determined based on the
severity of the behaviors and according to the
AMC organizations existing policies or Code of
Conduct.
17Monitoring Stop the Line
The Stop the Line AMC Advisory Panel will
evaluate the effectiveness of the policy and
identify needs for further education and
modification to the system. The advisory group
can then use that knowledge to refine the
initiative.
18Case Examples of Interest to Your
Unit/Department
19Discussion
20Appendix
21 One Physicians Perspective
- Dr. Peter Pronovost lost his father to a
misdiagnosis..In a March 2010 New York Times
interview, he said, - A few years later, when I was a physician,
I met Sorrel King, whose 18-month-old daughter,
Josie, had died at Hopkins from infection and
dehydration after a catheter insertion. - The mother and the nurses had recognized
that the little girl was in trouble. But some of
the doctors charged with her care wouldnt
listen. So you had a child die of dehydration, a
third world disease, at one of the best hospitals
in the world. Many people here were quite
anguished about it. And the soul-searching that
followed made it possible for me to do new safety
research and push for changes. - What exactly was wrong here?
- As at many hospitals, we had dysfunctional
teamwork because of an exceedingly hierarchal
culture. When confrontations occurred, the
problem was rarely framed in terms of what was
best for the patient. It was Im right. Im
more senior than you. Dont tell me what to do.
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23 Effective Communication and Teamwork How?
Structured Communication SBAR
Language Key words, the ability to speak up in a respectful manner and stop the line (or ask for clarification)
Psychological Safety An environment of respect
Effective Leadership Flat hierarchy, sharing the plan, continuously inviting other team members into the conversation, explicitly asking people to share questions or concerns, using peoples names
Courtesy Michael Leonard, MD Karen Frush, MD
Presentation at the SLCH UBJP Team Leaders
Workshop, EPNEC, May 12, 2009.