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Delays in treatment
http://www.jcaho.org/
While hospital Emergency Departments (EDs) are the source of just over
one-half of all reported sentinel event cases of patient death or
permanent injury due to delays in treatment, Joint Commission sentinel
event data reveal that such serious problems can occur in any hospital
unit, as well as in other health care settings. Of the 55 reported cases
of delays in treatment, 29 were ED-related, while 26 cases originated in
hospital intensive care units, medical-surgical units, inpatient
psychiatric hospitals, freestanding and hospital-based ambulatory care
services, the operating room and in the home care setting.
Of the 55 cases of delays in treatment,
52 resulted in patient death.
The reported reasons for the delays in treatment are many and varied
with the most common factor being misdiagnosis (42 percent). Other
delaying factors include: delayed test results (15 percent); physician
availability (13 percent); delayed administration of ordered care (13
percent); incomplete treatment (11 percent); delayed initial assessment
(7 percent); patient left unattended (4 percent); paging system
malfunction (2 percent); and unable to locate ER entrance (2 percent).
Of the 23 cases involving misdiagnoses, the most frequent misdiagnosis
was meningitis (7); six of the seven cases were in children. Other
misdiagnosed conditions included various forms of cardiac disease,
pulmonary embolism, trauma, asthma, neurologic disorder, and four cases
of unknown diagnosis due to the patient leaving without being evaluated.
Of the five cases that occurred in inpatient psychiatric hospitals, all
were related to the delayed diagnosis or treatment of non-behavioral
medical conditions.
Multiple root causes
identified
Analyses of the cases reveal that multiple root causes contributed to
each sentinel event, with
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Sentinel Event Alert
Advisory Group
Henri R. Manasse, Jr., Ph.D., Sc.D., Chairman
James P. Bagian, M.D., P.E.
Jim Battles, Ph.D.
William H. Beeson, M.D.
Patrick J. Brennan, M.D.
Sean Clarke, R.N., Ph.D., CRNP
Michael Cohen, R.Ph., M.S., D.Sc.
Jim Conway
Martin H. Diamond, CHE
Cindy Dougherty, R.N., CPHQ
Steven S. Fountain, M.D.
Karl B. Gills, FACHE
Peter Gross, M.D.
Jennifer Jackson, B.S.N., J.D.
Brent James, M.D.
Jane McCaffrey, MHSA, DFASHRM
Mark W. Milner, R.N.
Jeanine Arden Ornt, Esq.
Grena Porto, R.N., M.S., ARM, CPHRM
Carl A. Sirio, M.D.
Ronni P. Solomon, J.D.
Bonnie J. Atterbury Taylor, M.D.
H. G. Whittington, M.D.
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most organizations
(84 percent) citing a breakdown in communication, most often with or
between physicians (67 percent). Organizations also cited problems with
patient assessment process (75 percent); continuum of care issues (62
percent), most often relating to discontinuity of care across settings
or shifts; orientation and training of staff (46 percent); availability
of critical patient information (42 percent); staffing levels (25
percent); and availability of physician specialists (16 percent).
Among the ED cases, the most commonly cited root causes were staffing
(34 percent) and availability of physician specialists (21 percent);
overcrowding was cited as a contributing factor in 31 percent of the
cases.
According to an April 2002 American Hospital Association survey of
hospitals1, the majority of hospital EDs perceive they are at
or over operating capacity with more than 90 percent of large hospitals
(300 plus beds) reporting EDs at or over capacity. And, according to the
survey, capacity constraints translate into longer waiting times for
treatment, longer stays in the ED, and longer waiting times to get
admitted to a general acute, critical care, or psychiatric bed.
"Delays have always been a source of concern for Emergency Departments,
due in part to the inability to turn people away," says Michael T. Rapp,
M.D., FACEP, past president of the American College of Emergency
Physicians, and member of JCAHO's Hospital Professional and Technical
Advisory Committee.
"Providing timely
treatment and avoiding delays is a constant challenge. Causes of delays
tend to be multi-factorial, and both external and internal to the
emergency department. Currently, issues of overcrowding are a threat to
emergency departments everywhere, frequently stemming from insufficient
inpatient beds. Other external factors can include slow turnaround of
lab and X-ray results. Within the emergency department itself, there are
a number of things that can be done to address delays, including
simplifying and standardizing processes, and developing staffing
standards that relate to peaks of activity, not averages. It is also
important to teach principles of teamwork which can both improve
efficiency and enhance patient safety. Among them are communication
techniques such as confirming verbal orders."
Risk reduction strategies implemented
As a result of the sentinel events arising from delays in treatment and
in response to the many identified root causes, health care
organizations implemented multiple and varied risk reduction strategies.
These strategies include a redesign of:
-
Orientation and
training processes (80 percent)
-
Transfer
procedures (27 percent)
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Staffing plans (25
percent)
-
On-call specialist
contact procedures (22 percent)
-
Triage procedures
(16 percent)
-
Physical space (11
percent)
Other strategies
include the implementation of formal oral communication procedures (25
percent); revised specialist on-call procedures (13 percent); and the
revision or redesign of various other procedures such as initial
assessment processes, patient information retrieval processes,
credentialing and privileging processes, communication of abnormal lab
or radiology results, and the implementation of voice recognition
transcription software.
To help address communication issues, health care organizations can look
to health information management (HIM) professionals who can advise on
proper methods of documenting information, and assist in the development
of lists of approved or prohibited abbreviations, optimizing information
availability, duplicate record control, and addressing issues of
timeliness and the completeness of records. "When health information
availability issues are identified—whether oral, written or
electronic—organizations are encouraged to include HIM professionals
into the redesign processes to address problems at the source," says
Beth Hjort, R.H.I.A., professional practice manager, American Health
Information Management Association (AHIMA). "It is absolutely critical
to create an environment and culture where individuals feel safe in
asking questions and probing until there is complete understanding."
Joint Commission recommendations
In light of the number of organizations experiencing delays in treatment
that cite problems with communication, JCAHO recommends that
organizations:
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Implement
processes and procedures designed to improve the timeliness,
completeness, and accuracy of staff-to-staff communication, including
communication with and between resident and attending physicians.
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Implement
face-to-face interdisciplinary change-of-shift debriefings.
-
Take steps to
reduce reliance on verbal orders and require a procedure of "read
back" or verification when verbal orders are necessary.
In addition, JCAHO
recommends 4) that hospital EDs implement strategies to maintain a high
index of suspicion for meningitis.
Resources
1 Emergency Department Overload: A Growing Crisis. The
Results of the American Hospital Association Survey of Emergency
Department (ED) and Hospital Capacity, April 2002.
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