Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

For your health, officials prescribe a culture change at hospitals

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • For your health, officials prescribe a culture change at hospitals

    For your health, officials prescribe a culture change at hospitals

    TimesLeader.com (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania)
    Monday, July 11, 2005

    By JD MALONE, Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service

    WASHINGTON - (KRT) - Setting foot into a hospital ought to be a safe
    thing for anyone requiring medical treatment, but the truth is that the
    best-trained medical personnel surrounding a patient, from top-flight
    surgeons to highly recruited nurses, may end up doing more harm than
    good, according to comments made Monday at a health-care leadership
    conference at Georgetown University.

    The Institute of Medicine, an independent health and science institute,
    reported in 1999 that deaths in the United States caused by preventable
    adverse effects from care given to patients outnumber deaths caused by
    motor vehicle accidents, breast cancer or AIDS.

    Dr. James P. Bagian, a former NASA astronaut and currently the director
    of the Veterans Administration National Center for Patient Safety, said,
    "The problems stem from a combination of ignorance and arrogance. Either
    you don't know (what you are doing) or you think that you know best."

    Bagian added that health care has a cottage industry mentality - with
    many different units working as individuals inside the same
    organization. This has bred a culture of total reliance on individual
    responsibility, individual perfection and has perpetuated a cycle of
    "train and blame" philosophies that put patients at risk, he said.

    "People do not typically understand the goal in health care," Bagian
    said. "What you should care about is prevention of harm instead of
    prevention of errors."

    Bagian said that the aviation industry - unlike the medical industry -
    seeks to fix a system so that when an individual isn't perfect, there is
    still a positive outcome. For instance, commercial airliners have one
    more engine than they need to operate safely in case of a catastrophic
    failure, but in surgery there is no backup or well-developed plan to
    avert errors or to correct them. If something bad happens, it is likely
    that something much worse will result, he said.

    The costs of the errors that are made in hospitals do far more than
    raise individual premiums. Complicated surgery (often a result of a
    critical error) is far less profitable (3 percent on the average) than
    noncomplicated surgery (34 percent), and as a result, hurts the bottom
    line, Bagian said.

    He added that one of the fundamental problems with health-care systems
    is a "normalization of deviance, or people saying, `That's the way the
    world is.'"

    Instead, Bagian called for sweeping changes in the way the health-care
    industry organizes its internal systems. He wants to see hospitals move
    to a learning system instead of one based on accountability or blame. He
    said that the systems need to mirror that of the aviation industry -
    non-punitive and de-identifying, so that individuals will not fear
    reporting errors and close calls.

    Hospital administrators agreed that the culture of their organizations
    needs to change, but they said change also needs to occur at medical and
    nursing schools so that medical professionals are ready to work as a
    team to discuss and prevent mistakes and share the results so that
    others learn through detailed reporting.

    The American Medical Student Association agreed. AMSA's president, Dr.
    Brian Palmer, said in a news release that malpractice litigation reform
    "should include a system to share the potentially life-saving
    information learned through medical error reporting, and fostering
    better communication between physicians and patients."

    Bernard Horak, a professor and director of Health Systems Administration
    Programs at Georgetown University, said that health-care institutions
    should have an immediate response to a crisis and a system in place to
    report information so that others can learn from it.

    He said that health care systems should get away from the mentality of
    "first as an individual, do no harm" to a system of "first as a health
    system, do no harm."

    "Successful change means looking below the waterline," Horak said. "We
    need to look at the underlying structure that allows for mistakes to occur."

    Horak said that coordinated communication is the most important factor
    in quality patient care and that the traditional practice of separating
    medical teams (nurses on one team, doctors on another) has created a
    communication system that is fundamentally impaired.

    To help fix the problem, Horak recommended that doctors, nurses and
    others talk every day about "what did we do right? What do we need to do
    differently? And what did we learn?" so that the systems change from an
    individual- to a team-oriented approach that views every member as a
    critical link - including the patients.


    http://www.timesleader.com/mld/timesleader/news/politics/12107892.htm
Working...
X