Statement in relation to HDC Report
Statementb from Capital & Coast DHB follows
Statement in
relation to HDC Report
(Case 05HDC11908)
Comments from Dr Judith Aitken, chair, Capital & Coast District Health Board
The death of a patient in our care in
2004 was a tragedy and Capital & Coast District Health Board
(C&C DHB) sincerely apologises to the patient’s family for
the loss of their loved one.
The Board takes full responsibility for the events leading up to this unfortunate outcome.
The HDC has noted in his report that C&C DHB failed “to provide safe and appropriate care for a very unwell patient (and that) in addition to the clear system failure, several individual doctors and nurses must accept responsibility for their failure to provide appropriate medical and nursing care.” We acknowledge and accept these comments.
We have contacted the family and have met to express to them directly our apologies and deep regret.
Recommendations from the Health and Disability Commissioner (HDC), along with recommendations from an internal management review, are being given very serious consideration by the Board. We intend to adopt all changes necessary to ensure greater responsiveness to patients’ needs, and to their safety in our care.
This tragic event and these review processes have triggered comprehensive Board evaluation of many critical areas of concern.
In particular, we have carried out significant reviews of our hospital processes and clinical practice, and have made a great many improvements over the past three years.
While many of these improvements have been in direct response to issues raised by the HDC, others had already been identified and implemented through our own longer term developmental planning, auditing and resource improvement processes.
These changes have substantially increased our confidence in the way we currently, and in future will, respond to patients’ needs.
Our determination to ensure safe, high quality, continuous and responsive patient care has been reinforced. The Board and all our staff are committed to continuously improving these systems and procedures, and to fully disclosing all information relating to a patient’s care (while at the same time preserving their rights to privacy).
A number of steps have been, and
are being, taken to improve our systems and processes;
including:
- Investing in a series of workshops for
staff, to improve the way they talk to each other and to
patients and their families;
- Improving the documenting
process to support the clear relaying of instructions and
observations between medical staff;
- Reviewing and
improving access to nicotine replacement therapy for
nicotine-addicted patients to complement our Smoke Free
Policy;
- Reviewing the scope of practice of nursing
staff and changing procedures to provide staff members with
appropriate, focused supervision when necessary;
-
Setting up a regular audit system to ensure that all deaths
reported to the Coroner are treated as Reportable
Events;
- Reviewing our serious event policy to ensure
family are given sympathetic, respectful responses, with
prompt and reliable information, after the unexpected death
of a family member.
Some other initiatives, which have
their genesis in our wider quality improvement processes,
will also help to avoid recurrence of events such as the
current case, including;
- The introduction of a
radiology imaging system (PACS), which provides clinicians
with greatly improved access to digital patient images;
-
Implementing a new care planning system that focuses on
individual patients and streamlines the process of patient
admission through to discharge;
- Increased staffing
levels;
- The development of a specialist Medical High
Dependency Bay and increased bed numbers and staffing in the
Intensive Care Unit;
- Implementing a new comprehensive
system for electronically recording a patient’s health
record. Once implemented, this will enable electronic
‘sign-off’ of clinical test results by the responsible
medical staff.
A comprehensive action plan has been developed to ensure any outstanding issues are addressed.
This event has led us to critically review our clinical audit and reporting systems, to more effectively identify issues and errors through our review processes for reportable and serious events – including unexpected death. We will also continue to carry out highly focused clinical audits, as well as particular quality monitoring projects, using all the processes for risk management that are at the Board’s disposal.
We want to assure the community that we have taken significant steps to address the concerns raised immediately after the patient’s death, and in the three years since.
The Board, managers and all our staff are committed to ensuring that patient safety remains paramount in our delivery of care.
Our top priority is always the safety and appropriate care of our patients and we will continue to provide the very best services we can.
ENDS
Additional Information in
relation to HDC Report
(Case 05HDC11908)
The following provides additional detail about the changes that have already been, or are in the process of being, implemented.
1) Further details on changes made as a
result of this event:
Open disclosure
Reinforcement of
policies on open disclosure of all information relating to a
patient’s care. We will be careful to distinguish a
patient’s right to privacy, while fulfilling our
obligation to provide the full information relevant to a
patient’s care.
Communication skills for staff:
We
have invested in a series of workshops for staff to help
them improve their skills to effectively communicate with
patients.
The defining principle of these workshops is
that if we can enhance these skills, we can make a
significant difference to patient outcomes, we can work
better with patients, and improve both patient and staff
satisfaction.
The programme is currently being evaluated,
with the intent to offer a broadened range of education
opportunities that strengthen the strategy and focus.
We
are also developing a plan to communicate better to staff
about how to utilise our emergency response teams, such as
the Medical Emergency Team which can provide valuable
assistance when a patient becomes seriously ill.
Reliable documenting process:
We have introduced the
Admission to Discharge Planner. This is a multi-disciplinary
care planning system which focuses on each individual
patient, streamlining their experience from admission to
discharge and ensuring continuous and appropriate care. This
process outlines the responsibility of clear relaying of
instructions and observations between clinical staff, so
there is a full understanding of the treatment required.
Handover processes
This was an issue raised for both
nursing and medical staff. Initially this was discussed with
only the staff involved in this event, but subsequently
there has been an organisation-wide policy created around
handover of information for nursing staff, and clear
expectations are set out for medical staff in their
orientation programme. All medical staff are required to
document a plan of care for patients, particularly over
weekends, that describes what the treatment is, when
treatment is to be given and by whom.
Scope of
professional practice:
The scope of practice for enrolled
nurses differs from that of registered nurses. Changes have
been made to ensure enrolled nurses are provided with
appropriate, focused supervision. One of the key changes in
policy has been to ensure enrolled nurses do not work night
shifts, but carry out duties only when more supervision is
available.
Smoking:
One of the challenges of care of
patients who are nicotine-addicted is to ensure the DHB
complies with Smokefree legislation (which requires a
smokefree workplace environment), but also considers the
immediate needs of the patient.
We implemented our
Smokefree policy in January 2005. We have also reviewed and
improved access to various relief options and boosted
support for these patients in a way that complements our
policy.
We are currently in the process of reviewing our
policy, in light of the HDC’s recommendations.
Reporting
deaths:
We are implementing a regular audit and reporting
system to assess all deaths at our hospitals. This has
improved our reporting and prompt initiation of
investigations when necessary. All deaths that are reported
to the Coroner are recorded as reportable events.
The
reportable events system on deaths is now better understood
by clinicians, and reports are written with greater
transparency in mind.
Informing families:
We are
reviewing our procedures and are improving training for
staff to be able to effectively interact with family members
in the event of a death. All families need to be given
sympathetic and respectful responses to requests for
information about their family member, in a prompt and
reliable manner.
2) Further details on changes made
after previously being identified through our longer term
developmental planning, auditing and resource improvement
processes:
The PACS radiology imaging system:
A new
digital image system (PACS) is being implemented to allow
for the viewing and storing of radiology images, removing
the need for printed films and giving doctors faster access
to patient images.
Clinicians will be able to view the
images on the computer network wherever they are,
streamlining access to patient medical information and
enhancing patient care.
Patient Journey:
The Patient
Journey is a project that has been underway in the
organisation for the past year. It focuses on two streams of
work. One of these is the journey for patients who come to
us in an acute condition. The journey focuses on what
happens to the patient during their arrival in the Emergency
Department and how they progress through the organisation to
discharge and with arrangements for appropriate care in the
community. The investigation phase of this project has
finished and we are now looking at trialling solutions for
problems that have been identified along the patient journey
pathway.
Staffing:
We continually strive to establish
and maintain the right mix of clinicians to provide patients
with the very best care.
A concerted and targeted
recruitment campaign has led to an increase of 450 health
professional staff over the last five years.
Some 120 of
these are doctors and nurses in the services affected by
this report. The investment in these staff is about $12
million of the DHB’s budget per year.
C&C DHB is now
comparatively well staffed with junior doctors. Our Clinical
Leaders now undergo a leadership programme. A performance
development programme for consultants is currently being
worked on. All Consultants go through the credentialing
system by C&C DHB to define their scope of practice and
fitness.
Our nursing staff now take part in a robust
performance review process as part of the Professional
Development and Recognition Programme. This has been
assessed and accredited by the Nursing Council.
Safety and
Quality:
There has been significant investment in quality
and safety over the past three years. Some examples of the
many areas we have invested in include:
The Quality
Improvement Unit, which now has eight staff;
Eight
Quality Facilitators working in services;
The role of
the Clinical Nurse Educator has been established to work
with Charge Nurses in the wards;
Offering nine
post-graduate courses for additional nurse training,
including an acute assessment skills course, with a view to
improve the skill level of Registered Nurses working in our
hospitals.
Research:
C&C DHB has taken the lead by
investing in and carrying out national research into the use
of oxygen in hospitals. It is hoped this research will help
improve outcomes for patients by establishing the
appropriate way to use oxygen as part of a full treatment
plan.
Medical High Dependency Bay:
The Medical High
Dependency Bay is a four-bed unit within the Medical Ward
that provides a ‘step-up’ facility for patients who are
seriously unwell, as defined by clinical criteria. Patients
have the benefit of specialist non-invasive ventilation
equipment and other infusion treatments. A
multi-disciplinary team – including a high
nurse-to-patient ratio (1:2) – ensures those in care are
constantly watched over. The facility is for patients who
need more supervision and care than being in a ward can
offer.
Electronic Health Record:
We are in the process
of implementing a very innovative and comprehensive system
that will enhance the electronic system holding every
patient’s health record. This means clinical staff can
have immediate access to the patient’s comprehensive
medical history, reducing the diagnostic and treatment
prescription risks. It will also include a formal
requirement for electronic ‘sign-off’ of clinical test
results by the responsible medical staff.
ENDS