Title: Patient Safety and Medical Error
1Patient Safety and Medical Error
- Holly J. Humphrey, MD
- Dean for Medical Education
- The University of Chicago Pritzker School of
Medicine
2The Institute of Medicine Quality Initiative
- To Err Is Human Building a Safer Health System
(Released November, 1999) - Impact?
- Awareness
- Regulation
- Reporting Systems
- Information Technology
- Recognition that medical errors are not usually
the fault of a single person but are usually the
result of flawed systems (Leape, Berwick, JAMA,
2005). -
3The Physician Charter
- Published by the ABIM Foundation, American
College of Physicians - and European Federation of Internal Medicine in
2001. - Ten professional commitments, including
- Commitment to honesty with patients
- Whenever patients are injured as a consequence
of medical care, - patients should be informed promptly because
failure to do so seriously - compromises patient and societal trust.
- Commitment to improving quality of care
- Physicians must be dedicated to continuous
improvement in the quality of - health care. This commitment entails not only
maintaining clinical competence - but also working collaboratively with other
professionals to reduce medical - error.
ABIMF, ACP, EFIM 2001
4Barriers to Change
- Threat to physician autonomy and authority
- Fear of malpractice liability)
- Complexity of health system (mix of specialties,
subspecialties, allied health professionals,
reimbursement issues) - Lack of leadership
- Scarcity of measures to gauge progress
Leape, Berwick, JAMA, 2005
5Intrinsic Challenge of Medical Education
Safety needs of patients who benefit when being
cared for by the most experienced physician
available
Educational needs of learners who require
increasing independence
Ludmerer, Johns, JAMA, 2005
6Patient Safety and Medical Education
PATIENTS
Interprofessional Teams
Information Systems
SYSTEMS FOCUS
STUDENTS
FACULTY
Lifelong Learning
Humphrey, JGIM, 2005
7Example
- The University of Chicago
- Hand-Off Clinical Experience
8Recent focus on Hand-Offs
- July 2003 ACGME set limits for resident duty
hours - Reduce sleep deprivation and improve patient
safety - Unintended consequence is increase in number of
hand-offs - Safety of hand-off
- Error-prone
- Variable
- Vulnerable gap in patient care
9Patient Safety and Medical Education
10Teaching Hand-Offs
- 90-minute interactive workshop on effective
hand-off strategies - Objective Simulated Hand-Off Experience (OSHE)
performed 7 days after initial workshop - Students evaluated pre- and post-intervention
11Teaching Hand-Offs
- Complete written sign-out
- Verbally hand-off patient and sign-out to
standardized resident receiver - Underwent one hour training on hand-off
expectations using the case and anticipated
trigger interval events - Feedback facilitated using Hand-off CEX
- Domains assessed were organization/efficiency,
communication skill, clinical judgment,
professionalism - Debriefing after OSHE
12Teaching Hand-Offs
- Results
- Statistically significant improvement in
preparedness for performing effective hand-off - 12 pre vs. 50 post reporting well-prepared
(plt0.012) - Student Comments
- Unanimously positive experience
- a must have, a great experience!
- probably the MOST USEFUL of all topics,
definitely under-taught - Felt realistic due to actual resident evaluators
- Wanted training for additional scenarios
- Practice sending and receiving hand-off
13Conclusions
- Feasible interactive mechanism to provide
students with ability to practice handoff
communication - Well-received by both students and resident
receivers - Has potential for future evaluative purposes
14Patient Safety and Medical Education