Improving Situation Awareness to Reduce Unrecognized Clinical Deterioration and Serious Safety Events

Author:

Brady Patrick W.12,Muething Stephen12,Kotagal Uma2,Ashby Marshall2,Gallagher Regan3,Hall Dawn3,Goodfriend Marty43,White Christine1,Bracke Tracey M.2,DeCastro Victoria3,Geiser Maria,Simon Jodi5,Tucker Karen M.3,Olivea Jason2,Conway Patrick H.16,Wheeler Derek S.27

Affiliation:

1. Divisions of Hospital Medicine,

2. The James M. Anderson Center for Health Systems Excellence,

3. Department of Patient Services, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio;

4. Family Relations,

5. Division of Quality Services, Akron Children’s Hospital, Akron, Ohio; and

6. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Office of Clinical Standards and Quality, Baltimore, Maryland

7. Critical Care Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, and

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Failure to recognize and treat clinical deterioration remains a source of serious preventable harm for hospitalized patients. We designed a system to identify, mitigate, and escalate patient risk by using principles of high-reliability organizations. We hypothesized that our novel care system would decrease transfers determined to be unrecognized situation awareness failures events (UNSAFE). These were defined as any transfer from an acute care floor to an ICU where the patient received intubation, inotropes, or ≥3 fluid boluses in first hour after arrival or before transfer. METHODS: The setting for our observational time series study was a quaternary care children’s hospital. Before initiating tests of change, 2 investigators reviewed recent serious safety events (SSEs) and floor-to-ICU transfers. Collectively, 5 risk factors were associated with each event: family concerns, high-risk therapies, presence of an elevated early warning score, watcher/clinician gut feeling, and communication concerns. Using the model for improvement, an intervention was developed and tested to reliably and proactively identify patient risk and mitigate that risk through unit-based huddles. A 3-times daily inpatient huddle was added to ensure risks were escalated and addressed. Later, a “robust” and explicit plan for at-risk patients was developed and spread. RESULTS: The rate of UNSAFE transfers per 10 000 non-ICU inpatient days was significantly reduced from 4.4 to 2.4 over the study period. The days between inpatient SSEs also increased significantly. CONCLUSIONS: A reliable system to identify, mitigate, and escalate risk was associated with a near 50% reduction in UNSAFE transfers and SSEs.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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