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2.
J Am Coll Radiol ; 21(1): 61-69, 2024 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37683817

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the estimated labor costs and effectiveness of Ongoing Professional Practice Evaluation (OPPE) processes at identifying outlier performers in a large sample of providers across multiple health care systems and to extrapolate costs and effectiveness nationally. METHODS: Six hospital systems partnered to evaluate their labor expenses related to conducting OPPE. Estimates for mean labor hours and wages were created for the following: data analysts, medical staff office professionals, department physician leaders, and administrative assistants. The total number of outlier performers who were identified by OPPE metrics alone and that resulted in lack of renewal, limitation, or revoking of hospital privileges during the past annual OPPE cycle (2022) was recorded. National costs of OPPE were extrapolated. Literature review of the effect of OPPE on safety culture in radiology was performed. RESULTS: The evaluated systems had 12,854 privileged providers evaluated by OPPE. The total estimated annual recurring labor cost per provider was $50.20. Zero of 12,854 providers evaluated were identified as outlier performers solely through the OPPE process. The total estimated annual recurring cost of administering OPPE nationally was $78.54 million. In radiology over the past 15 years, the use of error rates based on score-based peer review as an OPPE metric has been perceived as punitive and had an adverse effect on safety culture. CONCLUSION: OPPE is expensive to administer, inefficient at identifying outlier performers, diverts human resources away from potentially more effective improvement work, and has been associated with an adverse impact on safety culture in radiology.


Delivery of Health Care , Physicians , Humans , Hospitals , Professional Practice , Longitudinal Studies
3.
J Hosp Med ; 18(8): 730-731, 2023 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37301734
4.
Hosp Pediatr ; 8(4): 220-226, 2018 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29559504

OBJECTIVES: During hospital admission, communication between primary care physicians (PCPs) and hospital medicine (HM) physicians provides an opportunity for collaboration. Two-way communication facilitates collaboration by allowing the receiver to ask and respond to questions. At our institution, most HM-to-PCP communication occurred by telephone call after discharge. Our specific aim was to increase the percentage of patients for whom a telephone conversation occurred between HM and PCPs during hospital admission from 40% to >80%. METHODS: An improvement team that included PCPs and HM physicians redesigned the process for communication with PCPs to emphasize collaboration during hospitalization. Interventions were used to target key drivers of information transparency, PCP and HM provider buy-in, the value of early call initiation, process standardization, accommodating provider availability, and preoccupation with failure. We used improvement-science methods and run charts to measure our progress and attain our goal. RESULTS: The median weekly percentage of patients with a phone call completed during hospitalization increased from 40% to 85% at the satellite campus and 40% to 80% at the main campus. In addition to the standardized use of a telephone operator system to route calls and follow-up on unplaced calls, critical interventions included feedback on PCP call preferences to providers and the provider script for calls. CONCLUSIONS: PCPs and HM physicians applied quality-improvement methodology to ensure reliable HM-PCP communication during hospital admission. Interventions to facilitate communication between providers and learners (who may otherwise have limited interaction), such as the scripting of phone calls and feedback from PCPs to HM physicians, were important for success.


Continuity of Patient Care/standards , Hospitalists , Interdisciplinary Communication , Patient Discharge/standards , Physicians, Primary Care , Quality Improvement/standards , Quality of Health Care/standards , Attitude of Health Personnel , Electronic Health Records , Health Services Research , Humans , Interprofessional Relations , Pediatrics , Reproducibility of Results
5.
Hosp Pediatr ; 7(3): 156-163, 2017 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28232377

INTRODUCTION: The population of adults with childhood-onset chronic illness is growing across children's hospitals and constitutes a high risk population. National Early Warning Score (NEWS) is among the most recently validated adult early warning scores (EWSs) for early recognition of and response to clinical deterioration. Our aim was to implement and standardize NEWS scoring in 80% of patients age 21 and older admitted to a children's hospital. METHODS: Our intervention was tested on a single unit of our children's hospital. The primary process measure was the percentage of NEWS documented within 1 hour of routine nursing assessments, and was tracked using a run chart. Improvement activities focused on effective training, key stakeholder buy-in, increased awareness, real-time mitigation of failures, accountability for adherence, and action-oriented response. We also tracked the distribution of NEWS values and medical emergency team calls. RESULTS: The percentage of NEWS documented with routine nursing assessments for patients age 21 and over increased from 0% to 90% within 15 weeks and remained at 77% or greater for 17 weeks. Our distribution of NEWS values was similar to previously reported NEWS distribution. CONCLUSIONS: A nurse-driven adult early warning system for inpatients age 21 and older at a children's hospital can be achieved through a standardized EWS assessment process, incorporation into the electronic health record, and charge nurse and key stakeholder oversight. Furthermore, implementation of an adult EWS being used at a pediatric institution and our distribution of NEWS values were comparable to distribution published from adult hospitals.


Nursing Assessment , Quality Improvement , Risk Assessment , Severity of Illness Index , Adult , Algorithms , Chronic Disease , Electronic Health Records , Hospitalization , Hospitals, Pediatric , Humans , Middle Aged , Ohio , Program Evaluation , Vital Signs , Young Adult
6.
J Hosp Med ; 10(9): 574-80, 2015 Sep.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26033563

INTRODUCTION: Timely and reliable verbal communication between hospitalists and primary care physicians (PCPs) is critical for prevention of medical adverse events but difficult in practice. Our aim was to increase the proportion of completed verbal handoffs from on-call residents or attendings to PCPs within 24 hours of patient discharge from a hospital medicine service to ≥90% within 18 months. METHODS: A multidisciplinary team collaborated to redesign the process by which PCPs were contacted following patient discharge. Interventions focused on the key drivers of obtaining stakeholder buy-in, standardization of the communication process, including assigning primary responsibility for discharge communication to a single resident on each team and batching calls during times of maximum resident availability, reliable automated process initiation through leveraging the electronic health record (EHR), and transparency of data. A run chart assessed the impact of interventions over time. RESULTS: The percentage of calls initiated within 24 hours of discharge improved from 52% to 97%, and the percentage of calls completed improved to 93%. Results were sustained for 18 months. Standardization of the communication process through hospital telephone operators, use of the discharge order to ensure initiation of discharge communication, and batching of phone calls were associated with improvements in our measures. CONCLUSION: Reliable verbal discharge communication can be achieved through the use of a standardized discharge communication process coupled with the EHR.


Communication , Hospitalists , Hospitals, Pediatric/standards , Patient Discharge/standards , Pediatrics , Physicians, Primary Care , Child , Continuity of Patient Care/standards , Electronic Health Records/standards , Humans , Interprofessional Relations , Quality of Health Care , Reproducibility of Results
8.
BMJ Qual Saf ; 23(6): 499-507, 2014 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24347649

BACKGROUND: Substantial evidence demonstrates comparable cure rates for oral versus intravenous therapy for routine osteomyelitis. Evidence adoption is often slow and in our centre virtually all patients with osteomyelitis were discharged on intravenous therapy. OBJECTIVE: For patients with acute osteomyelitis admitted to the hospital medicine service, we aimed to increase the proportion of cases discharged on oral antibiotics to at least 70%. METHODS: The setting for our observational time series study was a large academic children's hospital. The model for improvement and plan-do-study-act cycles were used to test, refine and implement interventions identified through our key driver diagram. Our multifaceted intervention included a shared decision-making tool, an order set in our electronic health record, and education to faculty and trainees. We also included an identify and mitigate intervention to target providers caring for children with osteomyelitis in near-real time and reinforce the evidence-based recommendations. Data were analysed on an annotated g-chart of osteomyelitis cases between patients discharged on intravenous antibiotics. Structured chart review was used to identify treatment failures as well as length of stay and hospital charges in preintervention and postintervention groups. RESULTS: The osteomyelitis cases between patients discharged on intravenous antibiotics increased from a median of 0 preintervention to a maximum of 9 cases following our identify and mitigate intervention. The direction and magnitude of successive improvements observed satisfied criteria for special cause variation. Improvement has been sustained for 1 year. Treatment failure and complications were uncommon in preintervention and postintervention phases. No significant differences in length of stay or charges were detected. CONCLUSIONS: Even for uncommon conditions, rapid and sustained evidence adoption is possible using quality improvement methods.


Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Osteomyelitis/drug therapy , Patient Discharge , Quality Improvement , Acute Disease , Administration, Oral , Anti-Bacterial Agents/administration & dosage , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Male , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Program Development , Quality Improvement/organization & administration
9.
J Spec Pediatr Nurs ; 14(2): 79-85, 2009 Apr.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19356201

PURPOSE: The present study evaluated the use of the Pediatric Early Warning Score (PEWS) for detecting clinical deterioration among hospitalized children. DESIGN/METHODS: A prospective, descriptive study design was used. The tool was used to score 2,979 patients admitted to a single medical unit of a pediatric hospital over a 12-month period. RESULTS: PEWS discriminated between children who required transfer to the pediatric intensive care unit and those who did not require transfer (area under the curve = 0.89, 95% CI = 0.84-0.94, p < .001). IMPLICATIONS: The PEWS tool was found to be a reliable and valid scoring system to identify children at risk for clinical deterioration.


Heart Arrest/prevention & control , Nursing Assessment/methods , Respiratory Insufficiency/prevention & control , Severity of Illness Index , Adolescent , Adult , Algorithms , Child , Child, Preschool , Early Diagnosis , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Intensive Care Units, Pediatric , Patient Transfer , Prospective Studies , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
10.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17154115

We augment A. Singh's "Regulation of Human Sexual Behavior, Sex Revolution and Emergence of AIDS: A Historical Perspective," Bull. Ind. Inst. Hist. Med. (1997), by clarifying why medicine is ignored despite unprecedented pathogenic norms of Western society. While these societal norms are well correlated to etiological findings on divorce and extramarital sex, the norms cannot be rooted properly in our psychobiological nature without committing a 'naturalistic fallacy'. Accepted axiomatically in the West, the fallacy specifies that what ought to be the case is not inferable from what is the case about our nature. Thus although natural norms implicit in medicine were implied historically by a natural theology shared by major religions, the latter are wrongly deemed unscientific and irrelevant by secular politics. Lying furtively behind political policies that induce psychosocial disorders and preventable disease, the fallacy's exclusion is as relevant as medicine to averting disease.


Logic , Religion and Science , Sexual Behavior/history , Social Problems/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Philosophy, Medical , United States
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