Transcript
Page 1: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

Why do clinicians do audits?

Why do you want to improve care?

Page 2: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

What are values?

Page 3: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

Values are principles and beliefs that guide our actions

Page 4: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

What are the values of your patients?

Page 5: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

In clinical practice whose values do we need to be aware of?

Page 6: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

Respect for the diversity of values

Page 7: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

• Patient-centred and safe• Public health driven• Prevention-focussed• Professionally-inspired

P

• Objectives clear • Outcome driven

O

• Evidence based

E

• Team delivered

T

• Integrated

I

• Cost efficient and effective• Clinically governed

C

Page 8: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

Introduction to clinical systems improvement

Page 9: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

What is the perfect healthcare system?

• No needless deaths• No needless suffering • No delays• No waste• No inequalities • No feelings of helplessness

Page 10: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

Important questions

• You are providing a service – so who is the customer?

• Is there variability, waste, poor morale, poor value for money and defects in your system?

• Does your system have the capacity to cause harm?

• How much of your system adds value from the patient’s perspective?

• Has your system been designed?

Page 11: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

Why use clinical systems improvement methodologies?

• They are good at discovering waste in a system• Can tackle the problems in your service • Can reduce waiting times• Can revolutionise your service (given commitment)• Require a team of key stakeholders who can analyse a

problem from different perspectives (including that of the patient)

• Who are the stakeholders in a better Malawian healthcare system?

Page 12: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

Which methodologies are useful to use when considering your audits?

• Root cause analysis and the use of ‘5 whys’ to truly discover the problem

• Ask the question ‘why?’ 5 times to get to the bottom of the problem

Page 13: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

5 whys example• The patient was late in theatre, it caused a delay. Why? • There was a long wait for a trolley. Why? • A replacement trolley had to be found. Why? • One of the trolley's wheels was worn and had broken. Why? • It had not been regularly checked for wear. Why?

The root cause - there is no equipment maintenance schedule.Setting up a proper maintenance schedule helps ensure that patients should never again be late due to faulty equipment. This reduces delays and improves flow. If you simply repair the trolley or do a one-off safety rail check, the problem may happen again sometime in the future.

Page 14: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

5 Whys group exercise

• In small groups, think of a problem that you have all experienced

• As the question ‘why?’ 5 times to identify the root cause

• How will you plan to improve the root cause?

Page 15: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

Was that easy?

• Some things are considered “undiscussible” but may be the underlying cause of organisational problems

• Think about an example in your own work• Divide a page into two columns• In the right column: write down an actual or imagined

conversation about an unsolved organisational problem on the right

• In the left column: write your unspoken thoughts & feelings relating to the conversation

• Now you are more aware of any “undiscussable” problems, think about how you might discuss them

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Page 17: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

Define a patient journey

• In two groups, discuss the patient journey for a 22 year old woman presenting with obstructed labour

• What are all the steps that she experiences from arriving at the hospital?– All the members of staff she meets– All the procedures she undergoes– Map these steps out as a flow chart on paper

Page 18: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

Arrival Midwife Assessment

History & examination

Differential diagnosis

Handover to clinical officer

History and examination

Differential diagnosis

Develop plan of care

Is our patient journey wasteful?

Does every step add value to our patient?

Page 19: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

Waste that does not add value

• Unnecessary movement of patients• Unnecessary motion (equipment and consumables

not to hand)• Waiting• Unnecessary tests and investigations• Over processing (repeated history taking,

examinations etc)• Errors• Overdurden of staff

Page 20: Why do clinicians do audits? Why do you want to improve care?

Can you improve yourpatient’s journey?


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