| PSRS
Director Invites VA Employee Participation
Linda Connell
is an experienced pilot and registered nurse, who now leads a pioneering
national effort to make healthcare safer. The effort is the Patient
Safety Reporting System, initiated by an agreement between the VA
and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).
The goal is
to involve front-line VA employees in contributing reports of safety
events and situations from their workplace directly to NASA as an
outside agency.
NASA was chosen
due to its long and successful history in administering the Aviation
Safety Reporting System (ASRS). Linda notes: NASA has 26 years
in aviation safety reporting, providing strong confidentiality protections.
Our experience in the aviation environment proves that the concept
of reports sent to an external agency works well.
Key features
of PSRS are that it is voluntary, confidential, and non-punitive.
NASA removes all names and location information from each report
submission to protect the confidentiality of the reporter. Linda
invites everyone working in VA facilities including physician, nursing,
laboratory, radiology, pharmacy, rehabilitation, dietary, and support
staff to report any events or concerns that involve patient safety.
What you consider to be safety is safety to PSRS, according
to Linda.
Now that PSRS
has been rolled out, it is receiving reports from VA employees across
the country. Linda summarized her invitation: PSRS is looking
forward to your report. Remember... See it, Report it, Make a difference.
January
2002 Workshop A Success
NASA Ames Research
Center at Moffett Field, California, welcomed 286 VA employees from
140 facilities, for a series of one-day PSRS workshops in January.
All VISNs were represented; 59% were from Patient Safety or Quality
Management, 35% represented Unions, and 6% were physicians and/or
administrators.
PSRS Director
Linda Connell described the features of the Patient Safety Reporting
System, operated by NASA. Rodney Williams of the National Center
for Patient Safety spoke about the complementary nature of PSRS
and the VA's incident report and Root Cause Analysis (RCA) processes.
Many of the
participant's evaluations were enthusiastic:
- Commitment
to confidentiality is clearly paramount to the success of this
program.
- This
program is needed and has been needed for a long time. I have
over 30 years Nursing experience and PSRS is long overdue.
- I
am extremely supportive of PSRS. I see it as an additional source
of information that will help us to improve our safety environment.
- This
is a way to get someone to listen to issues that get reported
but never get dealt with or addressed.
- I
hope VA's success is like NASA's.
Reports
from VA Front-Line Employees
No
Drugs... Just Gingko
Self-prescribed
remedies are seldom considered by patients to be medications. As
a result, an estimated 70% of patients do not reveal herbal use
to their health care providers, (Am Surg 2001 Jan).
Since several
herbals have been associated with bleeding, including gingko biloba,
garlic, feverfew, ginger and ginseng, oversight can be problematic,
as described here:
- "We
have a large number of patients on anticoagulants. Every few days
we find that the PT [Prothrombin Time] (INR) has gone markedly
out of the normal therapeutic range. This is often caused by interacting
medications or herbals. A large number of adverse outcomes are
due to bleeding on anticoagulants. (3 - 5% of patients on Warfarin
have bleeding.) There is a warning in CPRS (VA computer system)
but it appears to be inadequate or overridden. Need better prevention
of risk."
Numerous similar
incidents happen almost weekly, according to the PSRS reporter.
This report points out the need to specifically detail use of herbals
as well as all OTC meds in patients' medical history.
Saved
by a Repeat CBC
Checking lab
results inconsistent with a patient's condition is essential. This
reporter describes what followed when a patient's ER lab tests showed
a dramatically low blood count:
- "Patient
had significant changes in CBC in only 5 days... [lab values given]
... I questioned whether it was a diluted sample... Patient denied
any extreme fatigue, lightedheadedness, etc. Nurse reported that
CBC was not recent. Patient was typed and crossmatched for 4 units
and plan was to immediately transfuse. Patient arrived at MICU.
Repeat labs sent."
Good catch.
Repeat lab values were unchanged from 5 days earlier. The conclusion:
- "Patient
discharged to home, approximately one hour after arrival to MICU
(after admitted!). Transfusion not given."
Looks
Can Be Deceiving
This reporter
tells of a serious near miss:
- "Order
for metronidazole 500 mg IVPB. Dispensed KCl 20 mEq IVPB. Although
the bags are slightly different in size, both products (manufactured
by same company) are strikingly similar in appearance. While investigating
this event, discovered 6 additional KCl IVPB's in the metronidazole
storage bin. I assume this means more than one person made the
same mistake."
This reporter's
diligence prevented six potential adverse events.

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