Hospital nurses
will have the opportunity to help formulate policies to improve patient
safety as a result of new standards established by the Joint Commission
on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations that took effect July 1.
The standards are
designed to promote identification and prevention of patient risk factors
and to encourage hospital staff to report medical errors, sentinel events
and near misses.
The JCAHO defines
sentinel events as unexpected occurrences involving death or serious
physical or psychological injury, or the risk thereof, which signal
the need for immediate investigation or response.
"The new standards
are designed to improve the internal reporting process to identify areas
of patient safety that need improvement," said Marta Gleneck, executive
director of quality improvement at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
in Memphis, Tenn.
"They are
global to ensure that a hospital incorporates patient safety into its
overall strategic plan and that the specifics of that plan trickle down
to everyone, including the nurses at the bedside," Gleneck said.
"Nurses will be responsible for collecting and analyzing data in
high-risk processes--such as medication administration--and for making
suggestions for improving them."
The commission
has long encouraged health care organizations to examine medical errors
and other sentinel events in an effort to lessen their frequency, said
Zane Wolfe, Ph.D., RN, FAAN, dean of the School of Nursing at La Salle
University in Philadelphia. The new standards' emphasis on an integrated
approach to patient safety codifies that aspect of patient care.
"If health
care organizations encourage reporting of medical errors and sentinel
events, they will have a more effective mechanism to address those errors
and prevent them from happening again," Wolfe said. "Nurses
will become more comfortable reporting both errors and near misses."
But hospitals will
have to make nurses feel more comfortable about reporting errors, said
Kathryn Wharton Ross, MS, RN, president of KWR Consulting in Durango,
Colo.
"If punitive
actions are taken when nurses report errors, they obviously will be
less likely to report them," said Ross, who consults with hospitals
and lectures nationally on topics regarding JCAHO standards compliance.
"Nurses can't be afraid they're going to lose their jobs if they
report an error."
The new safety
standards will force hospitals to be proactive rather than reactive
in the ways they identify and prevent potential sources of patient risk,
Ross said.
"Over the
years, hospitals haven't really looked at their processes," she
said. "Now, they'll have to go back and examine how they provide
care. They'll have to break down their high-risk systems, examine them
and rebuild or change them," she said.
Perhaps the most
controversial element of the standards is the requirement that health
care providers inform patients and their families when the result of
a procedure or action is not what was anticipated. Hospitals will have
to train their staffs to deal with those situations, Gleneck said.
Each organization,
she said, first will have to define what constitutes a normal risk of
a procedure or action and then must train its staff on how to talk to
patients and their families when a risk that would not be considered
normal occurs.
"That includes
deciding whether an apology should be included in the explanation,"
Gleneck said.
"Patients
and families know that everyone is fallible. If the hospital staff is
truly apologetic, it will go a long way toward avoiding litigation."
The standards also
include patients and their families as partners in managing actual and
potential safety risks, and that nurses at the bedside are in a unique
position to help educate them about their roles, Gleneck noted.
"When it's
time to check a patient's blood supply, for example, a parent needs
to understand that it has to be done, even if it means waking her child
to do it," she said.
Hospitals also
should look to health-related industries, such as pharmaceutical companies,
for help in complying with the standards, particularly in the area of
medication errors, Wolfe said.
"Those kinds
of mistakes can be reduced by working with the pharmaceutical industry
to improve color coding and labeling of medications," she said.
The new standards
can be found on the JCAHO Web site at www.jcaho.org/standard/fr_ptsafety.html.