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Leading the Best Care...Always! Campaign Dena van den Bergh, Michele Youngleson, Gary Kantor, Yolanda Walsh June 25 th Cape Town

Leading the Best Care...Always! Campaign

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Leading the Best Care...Always! Campaign. Dena van den Bergh, Michele Youngleson, Gary Kantor, Yolanda Walsh June 25 th Cape Town. Agenda. Welcome Introductions Best Care…... Always! (BCA) Fundamentals of the QI approach Measuring for BCA A framework for leading BCA LUNCH - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Leading the Best Care...Always!

Campaign

Dena van den Bergh, Michele Youngleson, Gary Kantor, Yolanda Walsh

June 25th Cape Town

Page 2: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Agenda

• Welcome• Introductions• Best Care…... Always! (BCA)• Fundamentals of the QI approach• Measuring for BCA• A framework for leading BCA• LUNCH• QI in action• Next steps

Page 3: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Burden of HAI in LMI countries

Prof Shaheen MehtarUIPC, TBH & SUN

Cape Town

Page 4: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Situation Analysis of LMI countries

• There is very little published data relating to HAI but it is recognised that the rates of HAI are higher in LMI countries

• IPC programmes are poorly supported and established without recognition or career paths for trained IPC practitioners

• There is little accountability by HCW which lead to inadequate clinical care

• Clinical commitment is essential under Duty of Care

Page 5: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Comparative data- HIC and LMIC Burden of endemic health care associated infection in developing countries: systematic review and

meta analysis- B Allegranzi et al, Lancet, 2011, 377: 228-41

Page 6: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Crude HAI IR: TBH. Impact of an established IPC

programme

Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q42006 2007 2008 2009 2010

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

3.5

4.0

4.5

5.0

4.33.9 4.0

3.6

4.4

3.7

3.1

3.6

4.4

3.3

1.5

2.4

3.6 3.5

3.13.3

2.8 2.72.4

2.8

Crude Infection Rates

Infection Rates

Page 7: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

2006 2007 2008 2009 20100

10

20

30

40

50

60

18.56 18.88

13.38 14.2

18.0318.5 17.7

10.413.6

11

43.3

40

30.1

25.5

21.11

25.6

49.6

36.3

42.3

22

ICU crude HAI rates 2006-2010

NNU burns Surg Resp

/100

0 IP

day

s

ICU with highest IR: TBH

Page 8: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Comparing TBH to meta- analysis

Site Meta analysisMedian/1000 device days

TBH / 1000 patient days

VAP 28 ETA 1- 3

CR BSI 18 CVP & B/C 0.5-1.3

SSI 1.2-23.6/1000 surg op

NO DATA

Page 9: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Summary• By carrying out surveillance a statistically significant

decrease in HAI has been noted associated with device related infection.

• Policies and SOPS are necessary for compliance by clinical staff

• Bundling is a highly specialised system of reducing HAI with zero tolerance

• Questions to be answered─ Who will ensure that two people are available for each

procedure carried out?─ Who will do the data collection?─ Who will make sure that the same bundle is followed each

and every time a procedure is carried out?─ How will this be inforced?

Page 10: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

The BCA Quality Improvement approach

• All learn all teach• Learning by doing• Building a shared sense of the

system and the approach to improvement

• Applicable across disciplines

Page 11: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

The impact of Healthcare Associated Infections on the

hospitals

Page 12: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

The impact of HAIs on the hospitals

• Mortality and morbidity• Lab and pharmacy costs• Antibiotic use• Bed occupancy• Work load

Page 13: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

The impact of HAIs on your hospital

• Fill in the column graphs - peripheral vascular catheter associated infection (PVCAI)

- central line associated bloodstream infection (CLABSI)

- ventilator associated pneumonia (VAP)- catheter associated urinary track infection (CAUTI)

- surgical site infection (SSI)

Page 14: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

The fundamentals of the Quality Improvement

approach used in BCA

Page 15: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

A brief history of systems improvement

IHI Lean Overview Andy Brophy (MSc Lean Operations)

Page 16: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Quality Improvement requires two Types of Knowledge

Subject Matter Knowledge

Subject Matter Knowledge: Professional, content, evidence based knowledge.

Improvement Knowledge (Deming): The interaction of the theories of systems, our ‘theory of knowledge’, variation in measurement, and psychology.

Improvement Knowledge

‘What’

‘How’

Page 17: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Improvement

Improvement Knowledge

Subject Matter Knowledge

Improvement: develop effective changes that lead to an improvement.

Langley: Improvement Guide p76

‘Where’

‘How’

‘What’

Page 18: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Improvement Knowledge

Subject Matter Knowledge

Improvement Knowledge

W.E. Deming (1900-1993)

System of Profound Knowledge

Page 19: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Improvement Knowledge

Subject Matter Knowledge

4 fields of interaction - theories of systems - our ‘theory of knowledge’ - psychology of change- variation in measurement

Improvement Knowledge

Page 20: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Complex Dynamic Systems

• Step 1 – Everyone stand up• Step 2 – Without speaking; pick two

people but don’t say who they are or point at them (Keep it a secret)

• Step 3 - Move to be equidistant from both of the people

• Step 4 – Move one person and repeat

Page 21: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

The power of the system

Step 1: Pick a number

from 3 to 9

Step 2: Multiply your number by 9

Step 3:Add 12 to the

number from step 2

Step 7: Write down thename of a city

that begins with your letter

Step 4: Add your 2

digits together

Step 5:Divide # from step 4

by 3 to get a 1 digit number

Step 6:Convert your

Number to a letter:1=A 2=B 3=C 4=D 5=E 6=F 7=G 8=H 9 = I

Step 8: Go to the next Letter: A to B, B to C, C to D,

etc.

Step 9: Write down the nameof an animal (not bird,

fish, or insect) that begins with your letter

from Step 8

Step 10:Write down the color of

your animal

Do you have a 2-digit Number?

NO

YES

Output:

Color____________

Animal___________

City__________

Page 22: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Understanding Systems

“Every system is perfectly designed to achieve the results it gets” Paul Batalden

Paul B. Batalden, MD, Professor of Pediatrics, of Community and Family MedicineThe Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice at The Dartmouth Medical School.

Page 23: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Hand washing practice in the PICU?

from a Report of a participative observational study done during

January and March 2006Candice Bonaconsa and Minette Coetzee

Child Nurse Practice Development Initiative

Prof Andrew Argent, Red Cross Hospital

Page 24: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Actual x 100 = %

Opportunity

How we did this?

Calculating the % of hand washing

Page 25: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Comparitive Table of Hand Washing - Bed Space

24%

38%

7%

75%

0%10%20%

30%40%50%60%

70%80%

Docters Nurses Other Visitors

Goal 90%

Page 26: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Force Field Analysis

1. The current situation2. The desired situation3. The situation if no action is taken4. Forces driving toward desired situation5. Forces resisting change6. ……

Page 27: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign
Page 28: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Forces in the system keeping hand washing rates where they are

Time

A B

Lewin K (1951)Field Theory in Social ScienceNew York: Harper

Page 29: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Understanding Systems

“Every system is perfectly designed to achieve the results it gets” Paul Batalden

“All improvement needs a changeNot all change is an improvement”

Paul B. Batalden, MD, Professor of Pediatrics, of Community and Family MedicineThe Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice at The Dartmouth Medical School.

Page 30: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Improvement Knowledge

Subject Matter Knowledge

4 fields of interaction - theories of systems - our theory of ‘knowledge’- psychology of change- variation in measurement

Improvement Knowledge

Page 31: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Theory of knowledge

Our understanding of why things are the way they are.

Page 32: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

The Implementation Gap

PLAN

IMPLEMENT

FAIL

PROBLEM

EVIDENCE BASED SOLUTION

“typical” attempts to change

Page 33: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

GREAT IDEAS

SYSTEM ANALYSIS to identify barriers to care

DO

STUDY

ACTIMPLEMENT

SUCCEED/ SUSTAIN

PROBLEM

PLAN

Overcoming barriers at the frontline of care

QualityImprovementMentoring

Page 34: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Model for Improvement

What can we change that will result in an improvement?

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

How will we know that a change is an improvement?

What are we trying to accomplish?

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

Page 35: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Improving many parts of the system at once

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

Bundle 1 Bundle 2Unit 1 Unit 2

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

Page 36: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Improvement Knowledge

Subject Matter Knowledge

4 fields of interaction- theories of systems - our theory of ‘knowledge’- psychology of change- variation in measurement

Improvement Knowledge

Page 37: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Psychology of Change

Population

Innovators

Source: E. Rogers. Diffusion of Innovation

Early Adopters

Early Majority Late Majority

Traditionalists

Page 38: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Improvement Knowledge

Subject Matter Knowledge

4 fields of interaction - theories of systems - our theory of ‘knowledge’- psychology of change- variation in measurement

Improvement Knowledge

Page 39: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Understanding Variation

• Walter Shewhart’s (1891-1967) – understanding variation through Statistical Process Control (SPC)

Page 40: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Flip a coin

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 150

2

4

6

8

10

12

# heads up in 10 flips of a coin

Consecutive turns

# he

ads

up

Page 41: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

July Aug Sep Oct5/7 13/8 7/9 5/10

5/7 9/9 8/10

6/7 12/9 15/10

11/7 15/9 19/10

25/7 20/10

27/7 21/10

25/10

ICU: VAP infections 2010

Page 42: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

MeasurementCommon mistakes• Using bar graphs rather than run charts• Not enough data points (12 at least to

understand normal variation)• Not making allowances for normal

variation when interpreting data• Not measuring trends over a long enough

period - cut off at year end or financial year end

Page 43: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Reacting to Variation

Page 44: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Measuring forBest Care….Always!

Page 45: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Measurement

• Builds will• Assesses impact• Drives improvement• Keeps the project alive• Sustains the gains

Page 46: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Measurement• Data must be visually appealing and

accessible─Owned and used at the frontline of care─Routinely reviewed at monthly management

meetings • An active, encouraging feedback loop from

management to frontline staff

Page 47: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

MeasurementLeaders need to know i) what measures are being used for

─ incidence of HAIs─ bundle compliance (implementation of

bundles)ii) how data is being presentediii) how to

─ interpret the data─ respond to the data

Page 48: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Measurement for BCA

• Outcome measures (HAIs)• Process measures (bundle compliance)• Balancing measures• Morbidity and mortality reviews

Page 49: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Outcome measures

• the incidence of HAIs• impact of changes made

Page 50: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Infection Rates • Total number of infective cases per 1,000 device days:

Total No. of VAP cases

Ventilator daysX 1,000

Numerator

Denominator

Good for aggregate data but high variation for units when events are rare (<10%)

Page 51: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Welsh Safety Calendar

IDeveloped by Annette Bartley, Welsh 1000 Lives Campaign

Page 52: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Welsh Patient Safety Project

Page 53: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Measuring rare events

Events that occur < 10% of the time

Page 54: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Measuring rare events –days between events

Neonatal deaths – Malare Health Centre, 5’s Alive! Project, Ghana

Page 55: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Date of infection

# Days since last infection

Days Be-tweenInfection

Sequence of Infections

Page 56: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

IMeasuring rare events and time-between measures. James Benneyan IHI

Page 57: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Number of infections against annual target

Laurel SimmonsAssoc. Dir. for Quality ImprovementStockport NHS Foundation Trust

Target - 6for the year

(Set for eachHospital forEach HAIby DOH)

Page 58: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Dashboard of measures

Eastern sub-district HIV/AIDS Improvement project reportMarch 2009

Page 59: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Process measures

• Bundle compliance drives the improvement• Target must be set at 95% for each bundle

element and therefore the whole bundle (reliability theory)

Page 60: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Mar

-09

Apr-

09

May

-09

Jun-

09

Jul-0

9

Aug-

09

Sep-

09

Oct

-09

Nov-

09

Dec-

09

Jan-

10

Feb-

10

Mar

-10

Apr-

10

May

-10

Jun-

10

Jul-1

0

Aug-

10

-

2.00

4.00

6.00

8.00

10.00

12.00

14.00

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

11.97 12.00 12.66

12.35 11.83 11.82

8.28

12.96

9.78 9.94

6.70

9.06 8.58

10.01

9.17

7.16

5.63

8.61

69%

82%77%

71%

86% 88%91% 91% 91% 89% 89%

92%88%

93% 93% 92% 93%

80%

Ventilator Associated Pneumonias- Bundle Compliance and Infection Rate

Mar 09 - Aug 10

Infection Rate VAP

61

Bundle compliance

Page 61: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

A Framework for Leading Best Care….Always!

Page 62: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Framework for Leading Improvement

Page 63: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Leading BCA

Dr Hannes LootsRegional Clinical ManagerWestern Cape RegionMedi-Clinic Southern Africa

(9 mins)

Page 64: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Removing the Status Quo

Making the future attractive

1.Set Direction: Mission, Vision & Strategy

Setting Direction: Mission, Vision and Strategy

PULLPUSH

Page 65: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Removing the Status Quo

• Make the status quo uncomfortable

─There are too many Healthcare Associated Infections (HAIs)

66

Page 66: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Look to the Future

• Making the future state attractive

─ No more unnecessary deaths and suffering from HAIBest practice shows it is possible to reduce HAI

between 20 – 80%There are evidence based protocols and practices

to do thisWe will be part of a national and international

campaign

67

Page 67: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

IHI Whitepaper 2008 Seven Leadership Leverage Points for Organizational-Level Improvement in Healthcare pg 4

Page 68: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

3,4,5: Will, Ideas and Execution

Nolan TW. Execution of Strategic Improvement Initiatives to Produce System-Level Results. IHI Innovation Series white paper. Cambridge, MA: Institute for Healthcare

Improvement; 2007. (Available on www.IHI.org)

Will

Ideas Execution

Page 69: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Will, Ideas and Execution

• Why are we spending our time and energy on this project?

Page 70: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Will, Ideas and Execution• Leaders play a significant role in building and

maintaining will─ Clear, desirable aims─ Making it doable

start smallallocate time and resourcesremove obstaclesbring in the right people/teams culture of learning vs blame and shame

─ Keep the project alivedemonstrate interestmonthly review of data

Page 71: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Will, Ideas and Execution

• Engaging doctors

Page 72: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Will, Ideas and Execution• Overcoming the implementation gap

Page 73: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Multidisciplinary teams

Page 74: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Model for Improvement

What can we change that will result in an improvement?

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

How will we know that a change is an improvement?

What are we trying to accomplish?

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

PLAN

DO

STUDY

ACT

Page 75: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Accelerating change and improvement through networking and collaboration.

Expert Meeting and

Planning Group formed

Learning session

1

Learning session

2

Repeated improvement

cycles:

Repeated improvement

cycles:

Learning session

3

18 -24 months

Mentoring and support

Page 76: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Resources

• BCA website bestcare.org.za• IHI.org

Page 77: Leading the  Best Care...Always! Campaign

Handouts

• Getting Started Kits – including peripheral line• Presentation handout• Framework for leading improvement • Run chart article