Department of Surgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee 37232-2730, USA.
J Surg Educ. 2011 Jul-Aug;68(4):303-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2011.02.002. Epub 2011 Mar 25.
The Surgical Morbidity and Mortality conference has long been used as an opportunity for both process improvement and resident education. With recent heightened focus on creating environments of safety and on meeting the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) General Competencies, novel approaches are required. With the understanding that the provision of medical care is an inherently multidisciplinary enterprise, we advocate the creation and use of a Multidisciplinary Morbidity and Mortality conference (MM&M) as a means to establish this culture of safety while teaching the ACGME General Competencies to surgery residents.
A quarterly MM&M conference was implemented to foster communication between disciplines, provide a forum for quality improvement, and enhance patient care. All stakeholders in the perioperative enterprise attend, including the departments of surgery, anesthesia, radiology, pharmacy, nursing, environmental services, risk management, and patient services. Cases that expose system issues with potential to harm patients are discussed in an open, nonconfrontational forum. Solutions are presented and initiatives developed to improve patient outcomes. We retrospectively reviewed the topics presented since the conference's inception, grouping them into 1 of 7 categories. We then evaluated the completion of the improvement initiatives developed after discussion at the conference.
Over a 21-month period, 11 cases were discussed with 23 "actionable" initiatives for quality improvement. Cases were grouped by category; procedures (36.5%), process (36.5%), patient-related (9%), communication (9%), medication (9%), device (0%), and ethics (0%). All cases discussed addressed at least 4 of the 6 ACGME General Competencies.
Like the practice of medicine, the occurrence of adverse outcomes is frequently multidisciplinary. An MM&M conference is useful in its potential to meet ACGME General Competencies, engender a culture of patient safety, and rapidly achieve quality improvement and systems health care delivery initiatives in a large academic medical center.
外科手术发病率和死亡率会议长期以来一直被用作一个改进流程和住院医师教育的机会。随着最近对创建安全环境和满足研究生医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)一般能力的高度关注,需要采用新的方法。由于我们理解到医疗保健的提供是一个固有的多学科企业,因此我们提倡创建和使用多学科发病率和死亡率会议(MM&M),以在向外科住院医师教授 ACGME 一般能力的同时建立这种安全文化。
每季度举行一次 MM&M 会议,以促进学科之间的交流,为质量改进提供一个论坛,并增强患者护理。参与围手术期企业的所有利益相关者都参加,包括外科、麻醉、放射科、药房、护理、环境服务、风险管理和患者服务部门。在一个开放、非对抗性的论坛中讨论可能伤害患者的系统问题的病例。提出解决方案并制定计划以改善患者的预后。我们回顾了自会议开始以来提出的主题,将它们分为 7 个类别之一。然后,我们评估了在会议讨论后制定的改进计划的完成情况。
在 21 个月的时间里,讨论了 11 个病例,并提出了 23 个用于质量改进的“可操作”倡议。病例按类别分组:手术(36.5%)、过程(36.5%)、患者相关(9%)、沟通(9%)、药物(9%)、设备(0%)和伦理(0%)。讨论的所有病例都至少涉及 6 个 ACGME 一般能力中的 4 个。
与医学实践一样,不良结果的发生通常是多学科的。MM&M 会议在满足 ACGME 一般能力、培养患者安全文化以及在大型学术医疗中心快速实现质量改进和系统医疗保健方面具有很大的潜力。