TOPIC 7 USING QUALITY-IMPROVEMENT METHODS TO IMPROVE CARE

Download Patient Safety Curriculum Guide. Learning objectives. ▫ The objectives of this topic are to: • Describe the basic principles of quality imp...

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Topic 7 Using quality-improvement methods to improve care

Patient Safety Curriculum Guide 1

Learning objectives  The objectives of this topic are to: • •

Describe the basic principles of quality improvement Introduce students to the methods and tools for improving the quality of health care

Patient Safety Curriculum Guide 2

Knowledge requirements

 The science of improvement  Change concepts  Improvement principles  Role of measurement in improvement

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Performance requirement

 Identify the opportunities for using safety science to analyse errors

 Appreciate the range of improvement methods available for reducing harm to patients

 Apply at least one improvement tool in a particular clinical context

 Participate in an improvement activity (if possible) Patient Safety Curriculum Guide 4

The science of improvement  Appreciation of a system  Understanding of variation  Theory of knowledge  Psychology

Source: Langley GL

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Change concepts … … are general ideas, with proven merit and sound scientific or logical foundation that can stimulate specific ideas for changes that lead to improvement.

Source: Nolan TW, 1996

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The model for improvement What are we trying to accomplish? How we will know that a change is an improvement? What change can we make that will result in an improvement?

ACT

STUDY

PLAN

DO

Source: Langley GL, Nolan, KM, Nolan, TW, Norman, CL & Provost, LP 1999

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The quality improvement model: the PDSA cycle  What are we trying to accomplish?  How will we know that a change is an improvement?  What changes can we make that will result in an improvement?

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The PDSA cycle

Determines what changes are to be made

ACT

STUDY Summarizes what was learned

Change or test

PLAN DO Carry out the plan

Source: Langley GL, Nolan, KM, Nolan, TW, Norman, CL & Provost, LP 1999

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The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI): different measures Measurement for research

Measurement for learning and process improvement

Purpose

To discover new knowledge

To bring new knowledge into daily practice

Tests

One large "blind" test

Many sequential, observable tests

Biases

Control for as many biases as possible

Stabilize the biases from test to test

Data

Gather as much data as possible, "just in case"

Gather "just enough" data to learn and complete another cycle

Duration

Can take long periods of time to obtain results

"Small tests of significant changes" accelerate the rate of improvement Patient Safety Curriculum Guide 10

Three types of measures

 Outcome measures  Process measures  Balancing measures

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Three examples of improvement methods  Clinical Practice Improvement methodology (CPI)  Root Cause Analysis ( RCA)  Failure Mode Effect Analysis ( FMEA)

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The improvement process Project mission Project team

Ongoing monitoring Outcome Future plans

Project phase

Sustaining improvement phase 1 5

1 month Annotated run chart SPC charts

Impact phase

4 3

S 2 months

2 Diagnostic phase

Conceptual flow of process Customer grid Data -fishbone -Pareto chart -run charts -SPC charts

A D

Intervention phase

P S A D P

S

A

D

P

S

A D

D S P A P

2 months Plan a change Do it in a small test Study its effects Act on the result

Source: NSW Department of Health (2002). Easy Guide to Clinical Practice Improvement (www.health.nsw.gov.au/quality/pdf/cpi_easyguide.pdf) SPC – statistical process control

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Interventions phase Identify appropriate interventions Implement changes identified in the diagnostic phase Undertake one or more PDSA cycles

Interventions phase Decide on interventions

Undertake one or more PDSA cycles Source: NSW Department of Health (2002). Easy Guide to Clinical Practice Improvement (www.health.nsw.gov.au/quality/pdf/cpi_easyguide.pdf)

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How to use the PDSA Cycle  Use 'plan-do-study-act' cycles to conduct small-scale tests of change • Plan a change • Do it in a small test • Study its effects • Act on what learned

 Team uses and links small PDSA cycles for broader implementation NSW Department of Health (2002). Easy Guide to Clinical Practice Improvement (www.health.nsw.gov.au/quality/pdf/cpi_easyguide.pdf)

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PDSA cycle - single test PDSA Cycles – single test S A A

P

S

D

S

D P

A

D

S

P

A

Changes that result in improvement

P

D

Hunches, theories and ideas

Source: NSW Department of Health (2002). Easy Guide to Clinical Practice Improvement (www.health.nsw.gov.au/quality/pdf/cpi_easyguide.pdf)

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PDSA cycle – multiple tests

NSW Department of Health (2002). Easy Guide to Clinical Practice Improvement (www.health.nsw.gov.au/quality/pdf/cpi_easyguide.pdf)

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Impact and implementation phase 1. 2. 3. 4.

Measure impact of changes/interventions Record the results Revise the interventions Monitor impact

Impact and implementation phase Measure impact

• Annotated run chart • SPC charts • Other graphs

Implement the changes

NSW Department of Health (2002). Easy Guide to Clinical Practice Improvement (www.health.nsw.gov.au/quality/pdf/cpi_easyguide.pdf)

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Sustaining and improvement phase 



Once an intervention has been introduced, the intervention and any improvements need to be sustained

Sustaining improvement phase

This may involve:

• • • •

Standardization of existing systems and processes Documentation of policies, procedures, protocols and guidelines Measurement and review of interventions to ensure that change becomes past of “standard” practice Training and education of staff

Sustain the gains

•Standardization •Documentation •Measurement •Training

NSW Department of Health (2002). Easy Guide to Clinical Practice Improvement (www.health.nsw.gov.au/quality/pdf/cpi_easyguide.pdf)

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Flowchart of process Example of a flow chart for a project titled: Accelerated Recovery Colectomy Surgery (ARCS) North Coast Area Health Service Australia

Something amiss Visit to general practitioner Investigations Referral to surgeon Referral to hospital Hospital admission Return to life

Post-anaesthetic care

Operating theatre

Surgical ward

Allied health

Surgical team

Pain team

Pre-op ward Admitted to hospital

Discharge planner

Community health/ Peripheral hospital

Preoperative clinic Admissions office

Home

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Cause and effect diagram Social issues

Staff attitudes

home support

Complications

length of stay

poor pain control

wound complications

mobility of patient pain control

little family support

nutrition

Adequate nutrition of patient mobilization nil by mouth surgery pain control

Procedure

weak/malnourished infection

Prolonged Length of Stay

expect longer stay poor understanding of procedure

little knowledge of support services locus of control

Patient perception

general practitioner community health family

colon-care nurse

Post discharge support

Accelerated Recovery Colectomy Surgery (ARCS), North Coast Area Health Service, Australia

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Pareto chart

Source: Langley GJ, Nolan KM, Norman CL, Provost LP, Nolan TW. The Improvement Guide: A Practical Approach to Enhancing Organizational Performance. 1996

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Run chart Average Length of Stay (days) per month 60 50

Made change here

days

40 30 20 10 0 1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

m onth

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Strategies for sustaining improvement       

Document and report each patient Length of Stay ( LOS) Measure and calculate monthly average LOS Place run chart in operating theatre, update run chart monthly Bimonthly team meetings to report positives and negatives Continuously refine the clinical pathways Report outcomes to clinical governance unit

Spread

- all surgeons - left hemicolectomy - all colectomy surgery

- throughout North Coast Area Health Service Patient Safety Curriculum Guide 24