Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication...

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Clinical Clinical Incidents, Incidents, Disclosure Disclosure and Risk and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University of Technology Sydney SYDNEY 2007 NSW Australia The HNEH Quality Exposition and Scientific Program 10-11 September 2009

Transcript of Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication...

Page 1: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Clinical Incidents, Clinical Incidents, DisclosureDisclosureand Riskand Risk

Rick IedemaProfessor of Organisational Communication

Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication

University of Technology SydneySYDNEY 2007 NSW

Australia

The HNEH Quality Exposition and Scientific Program 10-11 September 2009

Page 2: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Main issues

1. How many clinical incidents occur (of what severity)?

2. How many of these incidents are disclosed?

3. How are disclosures experienced by patients and families?

4. What are the risks?

Page 3: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Three gaps

1. The gap between incident occurrences and organisational notification

• will the incident be properly acknowledged?

2. The gap between incident occurrences and the disclosure of incidents

• will under-notification minimise the patient’s chance of disclosure?

3. The gap between how different people experience disclosure

• why are disclosures experienced as generally less satisfactory for patients than for clinicians?

Page 4: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Terminology:

Adverse event, Error, Incident

Clinical errors(undesirable actions)

unexpected, unforeseen & unplanned clinical outcomes, complications, ‘known risks’

‘Near misses’(undesirable actions intercepted)

Adverse events(undesirable outcomes)

Latent (systems) problems(undesirable actions at one or more removes from the clinical present)

‘Preventable’ AEs (involving

harm)

Page 5: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Determining adverse event rates• Medical record analyses

– Harvard Medical practice Study 1991

– Wilson et al 1995

• Incident Reporting– Australian Incident Monitoring System (AIMS)

– Improved Incident Monitoring System (IIMS)

• Observational Studies– Participant observation (clinicians self-notate)– Non-participant observation (outsider notation)

• Interview Studies– Ask clinicians– Ask patients

• Routine data collections; Complaint/Coronial investigations …

Thomas, E. J., & Petersen, L. A. (2003). Measuring errors and adverse events in health care. Journal for General Internal Medicine, 18(61-67).

Page 6: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

"the reliance on information extracted from medical records most likely led to a substantial underestimate of the prevalence of injury.“

Leape, L. (2000). Institute of Medicine Medical Error Figures Are Not Exaggerated. Journal of the American Medical Association, 284(1), 95.

“the probability that the error actually caused the death was often considered to be low; reviewer assessment of errors had poor reliability and was usually skewed; and the underlying short-term prognosis of the person who died was often judged to be very limited.”

Hayward, R. A., & Hofer, T. P. (2001). Estimating Hospital Deaths Due to Medical Errors: Preventability Is in the Eye of the Reviewer. Journal of the American Medical Association, 286(4), 415-420.

Medical record analyses: agreement?

Page 7: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Asking patients about incidents

“Among 998 study patients, 23% had at least 1 adverse event detected by an interview and 11% had at least 1 adverse event identified by record review.

Record review identified 11 serious, preventable events (1.1% of patients). Interviews identified an additional 21 serious and preventable events that were not documented in the medical record.”

Weissman, J. S., Schneider, E. C., Weingart, S. N., Epstein, A. M., David-Kasdan, J., Feibelmann, S., et al. (2008). Comparing Patient-Reported Hospital Adverse Events with Medical Record Review: Do Patients Know Something That Hospitals Do Not? Annals of Internal Medicine, 149(2), 100-108.

Page 8: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Incident reporting analyses

Clinical Excellence Commission (2007) Analysis of first year of IIMS Data: Annual Report 2005–2006. Sydney, NSW Health.

± 2600 /yr

Page 9: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

± 2800 /yr

Incidents per year

Clinical Excellence Commission (2009). Incident Management in the NSW Public Health System - January to June 2008. Sydney: Clinical Excellence Commission.

Page 10: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Incident reporting: behind the scenes

• ‘A nurse mentions that she has been “blacklisted” on a ward after making an IIMS report about an incident. A doctor later explains to me that the patient involved was not really harmed in any way, but would have been inconvenienced. During the discussion with the other clinicians, the nurse clarifies that, from her perspective, the incident reflected a lack of vigilance on the part of nurses on duty. When I asked what she meant by being blacklisted, she explains that the staff on the other ward “weren’t very happy that I reported it”, and that they did not believe that the incident should have been reported. When I asked about the senior nurse’s perspective, the nurse said, “She wasn’t very supportive, no. [But] you look after your staff, which is fine.”’

Hor, S., Iedema, R., Williams, K., White, L., Day, A., & Kennedy, P. (forthcoming). Electronic Incident Reporting: A study of formal and informal accountabilities. Qualitative Health Research.

Page 11: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

“Estimates of the incidence of adverse events in hospitals vary

widely and measurement is difficult”

Department of Health and Human Services - Office of Inspector General. (2008). Adverse event s in hospitals: overview of key issues. Dallas: Department of Health and Human Services. [http://oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-06-07-00470.pdf]

Page 12: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Population Studied Incidence Rate

Method Summary of study

General hospital admissions

3.7% Medical record review

Clinical reviews of 30,000 medical records from hospitalizations in New York. Cited in the Institute of Medicine (IOM) report, “To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System.”

General hospital admissions

2.9% Medical record review

Clinical reviews of 15,000 medical records from hospitalizations in Colorado and Utah. Cited in the IOM report, “To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System.”

General hospital admissions

8.0% Medical record review and

patient interview

Study of 228 patients included review of medical records and interviews with patients.

General hospital admissions

9.0% Hospital incident reports

Study of 1,000 incident reports at two hospitals. Nine percent of patients had at least one incident report, primarily medication administration incidents.

General hospital admissions

17.7% Observation Qualitative observational study of 1,047 patients at a large urban hospital. The risk for an adverse event increased by 6 percent for each day spent at the hospital.

Intensive care admissions

20.2% Observation Study of 391 critically ill patients in yearlong review. Forty-five percent of all adverse events were preventable; 55 percent were nonpreventable.

Page 13: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

[2] Incident disclosure

‘Open Disclosure’ policy aims to:

“promote a clear and consistent approach by hospitals (and other organisations where appropriate) to open communication with patients and their nominated support person following an adverse event.”

Australian Council for Safety and Quality in Health Care (2003). Open Disclosure Standard: a national standard for open communication in public and private hospitals following an adverse event in health care. Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia.

Page 14: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Four elements of Open Disclosure

“1. an expression of regret,

2. a factual explanation of what happened,

3. the potential consequences, and

4. the steps being taken to manage the event and prevent recurrence.”

Australian Council for Safety and Quality in Health Care (2003). Open Disclosure Standard: a national standard for open communication in public and private hospitals following an adverse event in health care. Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia.

Page 15: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Disclose incidents – why?

Page 16: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Disclosing adverse events: drivers

1. Publication of health care failures and errors• Medical practice studies (cf. Institute of Medicine 1999, 2001, 2003) • ‘Scandals’ (Bristol, King Edward, Cam/Cam, RNSH)

2. Cost of litigation (Vines 2005)

• Health services, insurance companies and indemnity organisations seeking to minimise the (financial) impact of litigation

3. Positive outcomes• Montreal/VA Lexington’s ‘experiment’ – ‘tell the patient/family the

truth’ (Kraman & Hamm 1999)

• Univ Michigan Open Disclosure (Boothman et al 2009)

• COPIC

4. Pressure mounted by consumer groups [e.g.]

Page 17: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Open Disclosure impact (USA)

• Univ Michigan full OD – since ‘99• claims fell from 136 to 61

• litigation costs fell from $3 million to $1 million

• Time to closure from 20 to 9.5 months

• COPIC• $30,000 ex gratia cap

• ‘00-’05 drop in malpractice claims = 50%

• settlement costs drop 25%

Boothman, R., Blackwell, A. C., Campbell, D. A., Commiskey, E., & Anderson, S. (2009). A better approach to medical malpractice claims? The University of Michigan Experience. Journal of Health and Life Sciences Law, 2(2), 125-159.

Page 18: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Open DisclosureDevelopments in Australia

• 2003 publication of the Australian Open Disclosure Standard• 2006-2007 Australian Open Disclosure Pilot in 41 sites• 2007-2008 Evaluation of the Aust. Open Disclosure Pilot• May 2008 - Australian Health Ministers Conference

– formally endorses Open Disclosure– charges ACSQHC with furthering research into consumers’

expectations with regard to Open Disclosure (‘100 patient stories project’)

Page 19: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

“There is obviously a tension between open disclosure and the desire of clinicians and hospitals to protect themselves from criticism, disciplinary action or litigation. The evidence I heard suggested open disclosure is observed about half of the time”.

Garling, P. (2008). Final report of the Commission of Inquiry: Acute Care Services in NSW Public Hospitals. Sydney: State of NSW. (Vol II, p 559, section 15.214)

How many incidents are disclosed?

Page 20: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

NSW Open Disclosure performance data (CEC)

Page 21: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

NSW Open Disclosure performance data (CEC) cont’d

Page 22: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

You have admitted a diabetic patient to the hospital for a COPD exacerbation. You handwrite an order for the patient to receive “10 U” of insulin. The “U” in your order looks like a zero. The following morning the patient is given 100 units of insulin, ten times the patient’s normal dose, and is later found unresponsive with a blood sugar level of 35. The patient is resuscitated and transferred to the intensive care unit. You expect the patient to make a full recovery.

Would you disclose this incident?

Insulin overdose scenario

Gallagher, T. H. (2009). Disclosing Harmful Errors to Patients: Recent Developments and Future Directions. Open Disclosure Seminar. University of Technology Sydney.

Page 23: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.
Page 24: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Your blood sugar went too low because an error happened and you received too much insulin.

Your blood sugar went too low because you received more insulin than you needed.

Your blood sugar went too low and you passed out.

Dialogue Canadian Medicine

US Medicine

78%71%

21%28%

1%1%

“What would you most likely say about what happened?”

From: Gallagher, T. H. (2009). Disclosing Harmful Errors to Patients: Recent Developments and Future Directions. Open Disclosure Symposium. University of Technology Sydney.

Page 25: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

“Would you apologise?”

I am so sorry that you were harmed by this error.

I am sorry about what happened.

I would not volunteer that I was sorry or apologize.

Dialogue Canadian Medicine

US Medicine

49%43%

48%54%

3%3%

From: Gallagher, T. H. (2009). Disclosing Harmful Errors to Patients: Recent Developments and Future Directions. Open Disclosure Symposium. University of Technology Sydney.

Page 26: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

From: Gallagher, T. H. (2009). Disclosing Harmful Errors to Patients: Recent Developments and Future Directions. Open Disclosure Symposium. University of Technology Sydney.

Comparing Patient and Physician Ratings of Disclosure Quality

[3] How are disclosures experienced?

Page 27: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

The ‘disclosure gap’

There is “a difference between ‘disclosure’ and ‘transparency’. It is one thing to say you made an error. It is another to fully open up and share and get down in the dirt, so to speak, and allow the patients and the families to really see what went on”.

Garling, P. (2008). Final report of the Commission of Inquiry: Acute Care Services in NSW Public Hospitals. Sydney: State of NSW. (Vol II, p 560. Section 15.219)

Page 28: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

How are disclosures experienced?

Page 29: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

[4] Disclosure and risk

The ‘disclosure risk analysis model’:– Severity of the mistake– Degree of responsibility– Intensity of self-blame– Technical culpability– Level of patient’s (family’s) anger– Threat of a lawsuit– Potential job loss– Possible damage to professional reputation

Hannawa, A. (2009). Negotiating medical virtues: Toward the development of a physician mistake disclosure model. Health Communication, 24(2009), 391-399.

Page 30: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Hannawa, A. (2009). Negotiating medical virtues: Toward the development of a physician mistake disclosure model. Health Communication, 24(2009), 391-399.

Page 31: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Well-established risk domains

Specific risk concerns

1. Legal-professional fears a. fear of litigation

b. apprehension of reputation damage

c. fear of loss of privileges

2. Cultural/personal norms a. professional groups protect their own interests

b. incident management responsibilities are fragmented

c. clinicians and health care services deny the occurrence of adverse events and practise self-deception

3. Lack of confidence in own or others’ communication skills

inability to manage difficult conversations

4. Fear patients experience distress as a result of Open Disclosure (non-disclosure as benevolent act)

a. distress can result for patients and families

b. distress can result for clinicians

c. distress can harm patients

5. Doubt about the efficacy of Open Disclosure

a. OD’s ability to increase patients’ trust and decrease litigation may be over-statedb. OD may prompt legal action

[4] Disclosure and risk

Page 32: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Other risk domains Individual risks

1. Communicating with

patients and families

1a. Doubt about the cultural appropriateness of Open Disclosure

1b. Uncertainty about how many people can/should be disclosed to

1c. Fear of not being able to prevent Open Disclosure from going wrong

2. Communicating with

colleagues

2a.The challenge of dealing with resistant and/or distressed colleagues

2b. Doubts about how staff from culturally and linguistically diverse

(CALD) background regard and handle disclosure

2c. The need to persuade colleagues to change practice on grounds that

Open Disclosure differs from ‘what we have always been doing’

3. Communicating with

third parties

3a. Doubts about how to apologise in a way that does not incur legal

liability

3b. Doubts about how to interface secrecy (qualified privilege) and

openness

Iedema, R., Sorensen, R., & Gallagher, T. H. (in preparation). What prevents the disclosure of clinical incidents? Sydney: Centre for Health Communication, UTS

Disclosure and risk (cont’d)

Page 33: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Bridging the disclosure gap1. Training

– communication / awareness training

2. Supporting– how can we make staff more comfortable with disclosing

incidents?• debriefing / trust: ‘what would you have done?’

• consistency in how individuals & incidents are handled

3. Taking a moral stance

4. Reinforcing– cultural change: ‘disclosure is part of what we do’

– legal reform: ‘making apologies less risky’

Page 34: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

1. The incident is personally, professionally and organisationally acknowledged

2. The clinician intending to disclose has the support of their colleagues, their management, the health department, and the insurance organisation(s)

3. The patient is involved in an initial discussion to prepare them for disclosure

4. The disclosure meetings are appropriately formal, respectful and culturally sensitive

5. The clinician(s) / organisation are able to offer comprehensive explanations for complex clinical-organisational processes and patient trajectories

6. The patient is recognised to have family members who may need support too

7. The organisation is able to offer ex gratia support8. The disclosure process reaches closure when the patient/family is ready

for closure9. The organisation appropriately records disclosure details10. The practice improvement process has a place for the patient to

be involved

When will risk management encompass disclosure?

Page 35: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

Iedema, R., Jorm, C., Wakefield, J., Ryan, C., & Dunn, S. (2009). Practising Open Disclosure: Clinical Incident Communication and Systems Improvement. Sociology of Health & Illness, 31(2 (March)), 262-277.

Iedema, R., Jorm, C., Wakefield, J., Ryan, C., & Sorensen, R. (2009). A New Structure of Attention? Open Disclosure of adverse events to patients and families. Journal of Language & Social Psychology, 139-157.

Iedema, R., Mallock, N., Sorensen, R., Manias, E., Tuckett, A., Williams, A., Perrott, B., Brownhill, S., Piper, D., Hor, S., Hegney, D., Scheeres, H., & Jorm, C. (2008). The National Open Disclosure Pilot: Evaluation of a Policy Implementation Initiative. Medical Journal of Australia, 188(2008), 397-400.

Iedema, R., Sorensen, R., Manias, E., Tuckett, A., Piper, D., Mallock, N., Williams, A., & Jorm, C. (2008). Patients’ and family members’ experiences of Open Disclosure following adverse events. International Journal for Quality in Health Care, 20(6), 421-432.

Piper, D., Iedema, R., & Sorensen, R. (2008). Open Disclosure and Legal Reform: Legal Issues Raised by Clinicians in the National Open Disclosure Pilot Evaluation. Sydney: University of Technology Sydney, Centre for Health Communication.

Sorensen, R., Iedema, R., Piper, D., Manias, E., & Tuckett, A. (2008). Health care professionals’ views of implementing a policy of open disclosure errors. Journal of Health Services Research & Policy. 13(4): 2008: 227–232.

Selected references

Page 36: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.
Page 37: Clinical Incidents, Disclosure and Risk Rick Iedema Professor of Organisational Communication Executive Director, Centre for Health Communication University.

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