Rodriguez-Paz Jose M, Mark Lynette J, Herzer Kurt R, Michelson James D, Grogan Kelly L, Herman Joseph, Hunt David, Wardlow Linda, Armour Elwood P, Pronovost Peter J
Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21287, USA.
Anesth Analg. 2009 Jan;108(1):202-10. doi: 10.1213/ane.0b013e31818ca423.
Since the Institute of Medicine's report, To Err is Human, was published, numerous interventions have been designed and implemented to correct the defects that lead to medical errors and adverse events; however, most efforts were largely reactive. Safety, communication, team performance, and efficiency are areas of care that attract a great deal of attention, especially regarding the introduction of new technologies, techniques, and procedures. We describe a multidisciplinary process that was implemented at our hospital to identify and mitigate hazards before the introduction of a new technique: high-dose-rate intraoperative radiation therapy, (HDR-IORT).
A multidisciplinary team of surgeons, anesthesiologists, radiation oncologists, physicists, nurses, hospital risk managers, and equipment specialists used a structured process that included in situ clinical simulation to uncover concerns among care providers and to prospectively identify and mitigate defects for patients who would undergo surgery using the HDR-IORT technique.
We identified and corrected 20 defects in the simulated patient care process before application to actual patients. Subsequently, eight patients underwent surgery using the HDR-IORT technique with no recurrence of simulation-identified or unanticipated defects.
Multiple benefits were derived from the use of this systematic process to introduce the HDR-IORT technique; namely, the safety and efficiency of care for this select patient population was optimized, and this process mitigated harmful or adverse events before the inclusion of actual patients. Further work is needed, but the process outlined in this paper can be universally applied to the introduction of any new technologies, treatments, or procedures.
自医学研究所发布《人皆会犯错》报告以来,已设计并实施了多项干预措施,以纠正导致医疗差错和不良事件的缺陷;然而,大多数努力主要是被动反应式的。安全、沟通、团队绩效和效率是医疗护理领域备受关注的方面,尤其是在引入新技术、技术和程序时。我们描述了在我院实施的一个多学科流程,该流程在引入一项新技术——高剂量率术中放射治疗(HDR-IORT)之前识别并减轻危害。
由外科医生、麻醉师、放射肿瘤学家、物理学家、护士、医院风险管理人员和设备专家组成的多学科团队采用了一个结构化流程,其中包括现场临床模拟,以发现护理人员的担忧,并前瞻性地识别和减轻接受HDR-IORT技术手术患者的缺陷。
在将模拟的患者护理流程应用于实际患者之前,我们识别并纠正了20个缺陷。随后,8名患者接受了HDR-IORT技术手术,模拟识别出的或意外的缺陷均未再次出现。
使用这种系统流程引入HDR-IORT技术带来了多重益处;即,优化了该特定患者群体的护理安全和效率,并且该流程在纳入实际患者之前减轻了有害或不良事件。还需要进一步开展工作,但本文概述的流程可普遍应用于引入任何新技术、治疗方法或程序。