Ross Julie, Wolf Debby, Reece Kimberly
Project Manager for Medical Group Administration for the West Los Angeles Medical Center in CA.
Assistant Medical Center Administrator for the Southern California Permanente Medical Group at the West Los Angeles Medical Center in CA.
Perm J. 2014 Winter;18(1):33-7. doi: 10.7812/TPP/13-071.
The Joint Commission’s Universal Protocol has been widely implemented in surgical settings since publication in 2003. The elements improved patient safety in operating rooms, and the same rigor is being applied to procedures occurring in other health care arenas, in particular, diagnostic imaging.
In 2011, Kaiser Permanente West Los Angeles’s Diagnostic Imaging Department desired to adapt previous work on Universal Protocol implementation to improve patient safety in interventional radiology and mammography procedures.
The teams underwent human factors training and then adapted key interventions used in surgical suites to their workflows. Time-out posters, use of whiteboards, "glitch books," and regular audits provided structure to overcome the risks that human factors present.
Staff and physician perceptions of the teamwork and safety climates in their modalities were measured using the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire at baseline and at 18 months after training. Unusual Occurrence Reports were also reviewed to identify events and near misses that could be prevented. Implementation of key process changes were identified as process measures.
Perception of the safety climate improved 25% in interventional radiology and 4.5% in mammography. Perception of the teamwork climate decreased 5.4% in interventional radiology and 16.6% in mammography. Unusual occurrences were underreported at baseline, and there is ongoing reluctance to document near misses.
This work provides important considerations of the impact of departmental cultures for the implementation of the Universal Protocol in procedural areas. It also reveals unexpected challenges, and requires long-term effort and focus.
自2003年发布以来,联合委员会的《通用协议》已在外科手术环境中广泛实施。这些要素提高了手术室的患者安全性,并且同样严格的要求正应用于其他医疗领域所进行的程序,尤其是诊断成像。
2011年,凯撒西洛杉矶医疗中心的诊断成像部门希望调整先前在实施《通用协议》方面的工作,以提高介入放射学和乳腺摄影程序中的患者安全性。
团队接受了人为因素培训,然后将手术室中使用的关键干预措施应用于其工作流程。暂停海报、白板的使用、“故障记录册”以及定期审核为克服人为因素带来的风险提供了架构。
在基线和培训后18个月,使用安全态度问卷测量工作人员和医生对其所在科室团队合作和安全氛围的看法。还审查了异常事件报告,以识别可预防的事件和未遂事故。关键流程变更的实施被确定为流程指标。
介入放射学中对安全氛围的看法提高了25%,乳腺摄影中提高了4.5%。介入放射学中对团队合作氛围的看法下降了5.4%,乳腺摄影中下降了16.6%。基线时异常事件报告不足,并且仍然存在不愿记录未遂事故的情况。
这项工作为在程序领域实施《通用协议》时部门文化的影响提供了重要考虑因素。它还揭示了意想不到的挑战,并且需要长期的努力和关注。