Showing posts with label WHO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WHO. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

TJC: Measuring Hand Hygiene Adherence: Making the What, Why and How Decisions

The Joint Commission issued a press release tonight about a monograph they have been working on. The full text of the press release follows.

WARNING: The monograph is 232 pages and weighs 4.46MB!
You can download the monograph here.

(OAKBROOK TERRACE, Ill. – April 14, 2009) Preventing infections is critical to patient safety. Effective hand hygiene practices have long been recognized as the most important way to reduce the transmission of potentially deadly germs in health care settings. To help health care organizations target their efforts in measuring hygiene performance, The Joint Commission is releasing “Measuring Hand Hygiene Adherence: Overcoming the Challenges.”

The monograph is the result of a two-year collaboration with major infection control leadership organizations in the United States and abroad to identify effective approaches for measuring adherence to hand hygiene guidelines in health care organizations. In addition to The Joint Commission, the participating organizations include the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, Inc. (APIC), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA), the World Health Organization (WHO) World Alliance for Patient Safety, the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) and the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases (NFID).

Measuring compliance with hand hygiene practices has long been complicated because of the need to monitor the practices of many different care providers in numerous locations for sufficient periods of time. Without standardized approaches to measuring hand hygiene performance, it is impossible to determine whether overall performance is improving, deteriorating or unchanged as new strategic interventions are introduced. The Joint Commission’s National Patient Safety Goals require credited organizations to follow recognized hand hygiene guidelines; however, studies continue to show that adherence to these guidelines is lacking. This is due, in part, to the variation in approaches to measurement, which makes rates of adherence difficult to compare.

The monograph provides a framework to help health care workers make necessary decisions about when, why and how to measure compliance with hand hygiene. The monograph systematically reviews the strengths and weaknesses of commonly used approaches. Examples of measurement methods and tools in the monograph, which also includes references to evidence-based guidelines and published literature, were submitted by organizations through the Consensus Measurement in Hand Hygiene project. The project was supported by an unrestricted educational grant from GOJO Industries, Akron, Ohio.

“Measuring hand hygiene adherence is not a simple matter,” says Jerod M. Loeb, Ph.D., executive vice president, Division of Quality Measurement and Research, The Joint Commission. “The monograph can help health care organizations more effectively measure compliance and strengthen improvement activities that save lives and money.”

“Monitoring hand hygiene is useful only if the methods are valid and reliable and the results are widely disseminated and used to improve practice,” says Elaine Larson, R.N., Ph.D., F.A.A.N., C.I.C., scientific advisor for the project and associate dean for research at the Columbia University School of Nursing, New York. “This Monograph will be an invaluable resource to institutions struggling to do it right.”

Electronic copies of the monograph are available on The Joint Commission’s Web site at
http://www.jointcommission.org/PatientSafety/InfectionControl/hh_monograph.htm. A free printed copy is available by calling The Joint Commission’s Department of Customer Service Center at 630-790-5800, option 5, or sending an email to customerservice@jointcommission.org.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

IHA News Update - March 11, 2009

The following is the cut and paste of the March 11 IHA News Update. Items of interest to healthcare quality professionals are highlighted in red.


Hospital Leaders Meet With Legislators at Hospital Day
IHA members interacted with more than half of the General Assembly during yesterday’s Hospital Day at the Statehouse. “Hospital Day was a huge success,” said Matthew Bailey, IHA chairman and president of Good Samaritan Hospital, Vincennes. “There was a lot of interaction between members and legislators, and the governor’s address was a great addition to the program.”

The meeting began with a lively Indiana Week in Review panel discussion led by WISH TV’s Jim Shella. Next, IHA presented an award to Gov. Daniels. The governor addressed the group and then took member questions. He commended hospital leaders for their statesmanship and praised members for placing patients’ needs before institutional needs. In particular he noted leadership in regards to patient safety and expanding access through the Healthy Indiana Plan. The governor also talked about improving Indiana’s health status measures and health information technology.

Members were also provided with a legislative update, talking points, and a Statehouse tour. The 2008 PAC awards were also presented. Attendance at the legislator reception exceeded expectations. Many hospitals were able to meet with their legislators during the reception and others scheduled meetings with them during the day.

Click here to view photos from yesterday’s Hospital Day at the Statehouse.

PAC Award Winners Announced at Hospital Day
IHA recognized several hospitals for their performance during the 2008 Friends of Indiana Hospitals campaign at Hospital Day.

The William S. Hall Award, IHA’s “most-improved” award went to Good Samaritan Hospital, Vincennes. Matthew Bailey is president and CEO. Two organizations earned honorable mentions for this category—Bloomington Hospital, Mark E. Moore, president/CEO; and St. Catherine Hospital Inc., East Chicago, Jo Ann Birdzell, administrator.

The highest percentage of goal award went to Henry County Hospital, New Castle. Blake Dye is president and CEO. Honorable mentions for this category went to Dupont Hospital, Fort Wayne, Dr. Michael H. Schatzlein, president/CEO; Bedford Regional Medical Center, Bradford W. Dykes, president/CEO; and Schneck Medical Center, Seymour, Gary A. Meyer, president/CEO.

AHAPAC MVP awards were also presented. The AHA MVP award winners were Blake Dye, president/CEO, Henry County Hospital, New Castle; and Matthew Bailey, president/CEO, Good Samaritan Hospital, Vincennes.

Bloomington, Clarian to Merge
Bloomington Hospital is moving forward with plans to integrate with Indianapolis-based Clarian Health. A definitive agreement has been signed. The merger is expected to be completed in 18 months.

ISDH Alerts Hospitals to Spend Disaster Funds Now
The Indiana State Department of Health is alerting hospitals that all disaster preparedness funds received under the 2008 contract must be spent by June 30 or will be subject to forfeiture to the state. Contract funds received in 2009 must be spent by Oct.7. If additional needs cannot be identified within an organization, funds may also be signed over to their districts for use on projects.

Seventeen percent of funds issued through the ISDH have not been reported as spent. Consult with your disaster preparedness coordinator to ensure that you have appropriately documented and reported your expenditures and that all funds are being used to improve your organization's disaster preparedness.


Program on Stimulus Provisions Set for April 23
Register now for e-Health Care Transformation: Demystifying the Stimulus Bill HITECH Provisions. The program is set for April 23 at the Montage, Indianapolis. Topics to be covered include medical identity theft red flags, mandated e-prescribing, HIPAA privacy and security requirement changes, and the implementation of telehealth to address workforce shortage issues. The program will also provide an overview of the economic stimulus package provisions for information technology and a practical approach to spending stimulus dollars on heath IT projects. To register, visit
www.regonline.com/iha2009e-health.

IHA Leadership Conference set for May 21
Mark your calendars for the 2009 IHA Leadership Conference set for May 21 at The Montage, Indianapolis. The program will be led by Sg2 Chairman and CEO Michael Sachs. Sachs will provide demand forecasts using IHA’s inpatient and outpatient data. The forecast will factor in market volatility; alignment changes; demand shifts; and changes in coverage.

Using effective forecasting techniques, this program will help leaders manage uncertainty by projecting how change will impact health care service delivery in the future. Registration information will be available in the near future. To learn more about Sg2 visit their Web site at
http://www.sg2.com/.

Registration Deadline for Retention Briefing Extended
The registration deadline for Engaging and Retaining Nurses: A Prescription for Redesign in Tough Economic Times has been extended until Monday. The program is set for March 18 at the Hilton Indianapolis North. Following the session, participants will have: an understanding of the role nurse retention plays in effective and efficient care; knowledge of Transforming Care at the Bedside—its principles, processes, and outcomes; an understanding of “vitality” and its contribution to nurse retention and care redesign; tools for measuring and improving vitality among nurses and other caregivers; a framework for developing nursing leadership competencies to support innovation; and techniques to engage frontline staff. To register, visit
www.regonline.com/iha2009rnretention.

careLearning Informational Webinar Set for April 9
careLearning will host an informational webinar on April 9 for those interested in learning more about online education opportunities. The program will feature an overview of careSkills- a competency module that allows health care organizations to identify, assess, and analyze the skills, knowledge, and abilities of its workforce. Several IHA members are already enjoying the numerous benefits careLearning has to offer.
Click here to read the careLearning newsletter and to view a list of upcoming webinars. You do not have to be a member of careLearning to participate in the webinars.

WHO to Launch Global Hand Hygiene Initiative
In May, the World Health Organizations will launch a new global initiative called SAVE LIVES: Clean Your Hands. The aim is to globally improve hand hygiene compliance in order to improve patient safety. The WHO hopes to engage 5000 hospitals by 2010. Over 280 hospitals have already indicated their interest in participating. Learn more at
savelives@who.int.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

The WHO Campaign for Safe Surgery turns into "The Sprint"

  • On June 25, 2008 the World Health Organization launched its "Safe Surgery Saves Lives" campaign.
  • On December 20, 2008, Don Berwick calls upon all hospitals participating in the IHI 5 Million Lives Campaign to also participate in "The Sprint" by adding "one more change at a breathtakingly short time" - "adopt and use the WHO Checklist in at least one OR in every hospital in the next 90 days."
  • The Indiana Hospital Association recently posted on its "Patient Safety Update" webpage that it is supporting the campaign. "To participate, hospitals need only test the list in one operating room, by one surgical team, one time before April 1." It also says that Indiana is only one of a few states to have committed to testing the checklist.

The scope of the WHO's Checklist for Safe Surgery is broader than the Joint Commission's Universal Protocol to Prevent Wrong Site, Wrong Procedure and Wrong Person Surgery (tm).

Joint Commission's Universal Protocol: Universal Protocol

WHO's Checklist: WHO Checklist

WHO's website (with additional tools and resources): WHO Safe Surgery Website

IHI Campaign website: IHI Campaign Site

How long do you think it will be before the Joint Commission starts to adopt elements of the WHO's checklist?