Improving Shared Situation Awareness for High-risk Therapies in Hospitalized Children
High-risk therapies (HRTs), including medications and medical devices, are an important driver of preventable harm in children's hospitals. To facilitate shared situation awareness (SA) and thus targeted harm prevention, we aimed to increase the percentage of electronic health record (EHR) aler...
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Published in: | Hospital pediatrics Vol. 12; no. 1; p. 37 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , |
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01-01-2022
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Abstract | High-risk therapies (HRTs), including medications and medical devices, are an important driver of preventable harm in children's hospitals. To facilitate shared situation awareness (SA) and thus targeted harm prevention, we aimed to increase the percentage of electronic health record (EHR) alerts with the correct descriptor of an HRT from 11% to 100% on a high-acuity hospital unit over a 6-month period.
The interdisciplinary team defined an HRT as a medication or device with a significant risk for harm that required heightened awareness. Our aim for interventions was to (1) educate staff on a new HRT algorithm; (2) develop a comprehensive table of HRTs, risks, and mitigation plans; (3) develop bedside signs for patients receiving HRTs; and (4) restructure unit huddles. Qualitative interviews with families, nurses, and medical teams were used to assess shared SA and inform the development and adaptation of interventions. The primary outcome metric was the percentage of EHR alerts for an HRT that contained a correct descriptor of the therapy for use by the care team and institutional safety leaders.
The percentage of EHR alerts with a correct HRT descriptor increased from an average of 11% to 96%, with special cause variation noted on a statistical process control chart. Using qualitative interview data, we identified critical awareness gaps, including establishing a shared mental model between nursing staff and the medical team as well as engagement of families at the bedside to monitor for complications.
Explicit, structured processes and huddles can increase HRT SA among the care team, patient, and family. |
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AbstractList | High-risk therapies (HRTs), including medications and medical devices, are an important driver of preventable harm in children's hospitals. To facilitate shared situation awareness (SA) and thus targeted harm prevention, we aimed to increase the percentage of electronic health record (EHR) alerts with the correct descriptor of an HRT from 11% to 100% on a high-acuity hospital unit over a 6-month period.
The interdisciplinary team defined an HRT as a medication or device with a significant risk for harm that required heightened awareness. Our aim for interventions was to (1) educate staff on a new HRT algorithm; (2) develop a comprehensive table of HRTs, risks, and mitigation plans; (3) develop bedside signs for patients receiving HRTs; and (4) restructure unit huddles. Qualitative interviews with families, nurses, and medical teams were used to assess shared SA and inform the development and adaptation of interventions. The primary outcome metric was the percentage of EHR alerts for an HRT that contained a correct descriptor of the therapy for use by the care team and institutional safety leaders.
The percentage of EHR alerts with a correct HRT descriptor increased from an average of 11% to 96%, with special cause variation noted on a statistical process control chart. Using qualitative interview data, we identified critical awareness gaps, including establishing a shared mental model between nursing staff and the medical team as well as engagement of families at the bedside to monitor for complications.
Explicit, structured processes and huddles can increase HRT SA among the care team, patient, and family. |
Author | Chakkalakkal, Bindu White, Christine M Johnson, Andrea Meyer, Rachel Mayer, Beth Dewan, Maya Sosa, Tina Drozd, Alisha Seger, Brandy M Nasr, Alexander Brady, Patrick W Hater, Karen |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Tina surname: Sosa fullname: Sosa, Tina organization: Divisions of Hospital Medicine – sequence: 2 givenname: Beth surname: Mayer fullname: Mayer, Beth organization: Patient Services Leadership – sequence: 3 givenname: Bindu surname: Chakkalakkal fullname: Chakkalakkal, Bindu organization: Pharmacy – sequence: 4 givenname: Alisha surname: Drozd fullname: Drozd, Alisha organization: Patient Services Leadership – sequence: 5 givenname: Karen surname: Hater fullname: Hater, Karen organization: Family Partner, Cincinnati, Ohio – sequence: 6 givenname: Andrea surname: Johnson fullname: Johnson, Andrea organization: Business Development – sequence: 7 givenname: Alexander surname: Nasr fullname: Nasr, Alexander organization: Pediatric Residency Program – sequence: 8 givenname: Brandy M surname: Seger fullname: Seger, Brandy M organization: James M. Anderson Center for Health System Excellence, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio – sequence: 9 givenname: Rachel surname: Meyer fullname: Meyer, Rachel organization: Patient Services Leadership – sequence: 10 givenname: Maya surname: Dewan fullname: Dewan, Maya organization: James M. Anderson Center for Health System Excellence, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio – sequence: 11 givenname: Christine M surname: White fullname: White, Christine M organization: Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio – sequence: 12 givenname: Patrick W surname: Brady fullname: Brady, Patrick W organization: Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio |
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Title | Improving Shared Situation Awareness for High-risk Therapies in Hospitalized Children |
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