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    Misc

    'I am accountable for those unnecessary deaths'

    December 11th, 2008

    Picture and post contributed by Paul Levy

    I just returned from Nashville, TN, where I was invited to appear in a panel discussion with hospital CEOs and board members on the topic, "The anatomy of serious high profile safety events--powerful stories from senior leadership," which was part of a broader session called "Never Events: The Clock is Ticking." I was honored to follow two terrific speakers (see photo above): Paul Wiles, left, CEO of Novant Health in Winston-Salem, NC; and Greg Kutcher, right, CEO of Immanuel St. Joseph's Hospital in Mankato, MN.

    Wiles began with a heart-wrenching story about an infant's death from sepsis in his hospital, which was tracked to an MRSA infection. That infection was part of a spread of a bug in his neo-natal intensive care unit that led to the colonization of 18 infants in all, and may have contributed to the death of two others. "This was a direct result of staff not washing their hands appropriately," he said. Since that event, "we have been on a relentless hand hygiene campaign."

    The crux of his, and the entire presentation hinged on this comment: "My objective today is to confess," Wiles said. "I am accountable for those unnecessary deaths in the NICU. It is my responsibility to establish a culture of safety. I had inadvertently relinquished those duties" by focusing instead on the traditional set of executive duties (financial, planning, and such).

    [More:]

    Wiles ended his talk to the CEOs in the audience, saying, "If you cannot see the face of your own relative in a patient, or if you can not see the face of your own son or daughter in the face of a distraught nurse or doctor who has made an error, I suggest that your executive talents would be better placed in other industries."

    Poor Kutcher had to follow this incredibly moving story, which left the audience stunned and quiet. But he was up to the task, telling the story of an addicted nurse in his hospital who had stolen fentanyl (a narcotic) vials, used the drug, and then refilled the vials with saline solution and replaced them in their original storage boxes. A number of patients who had been treated in his hospital's cardiovascular unit had received these modified and contaminated doses.

    Kutcher had been on the job for only eight months when this problem came to light, but he knew enough to realize that this was his personal responsibility. He decided that he and the hospital should be totally transparent about what had occurred. They wrote letters to 400 patients, and issued both internal and external communications about the incidents. "We told everything we knew," he said, so that there would be no doubt about the total disclosure.

    Kutcher used the incident to work with his staff to plug procedural holes in his care system. He warned the CEOs in the room that the rate of narcotics misuse in the country is about one diversion per 100 beds per year. "We have elevated this issue to the same level as infection control," he said.

    I was third after these two impressive talks, and I told the story about our "never" event this past July, a wrong-side surgery case. You can read more about it on my blog, where I discuss our full and public disclosure of this event and the benefits that came from this transparent approach.

    In summary, the point of the entire session was to emphasize that final accountability for the quality and safety of patient care in a hospital lies with the CEO, with important backing from the Board of Trustees. While the actual work of process improvement is diffused through the organization, the energy and attention of the CEO to this aspect of the hospital's culture and operations must be ongoing and relentless. A key tool in the arsenal of the CEO is transparency, a full and complete acknowledgment of the flaws, errors, and near misses. Without this type of transparency, mistakes and systemic issues will not be acknowledged, and patients will suffer harm at our hands.

    Paul F. Levy is the President and Chief Executive Officer at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston.

    Comments, Pingbacks:

    Comment from: Marshall Maglothin [Visitor]
    Great article.

    However there is a lot of hype on the street current about "preventable deaths" DUE TO ERRORS. Several speakers at eHealth Initiative's annual conference thew out the fiqure of 100,000/yr, so a third respected speaker said "I'm sure it is much higher than that".

    100,000 is (ignoring population density) 2,000/state/year. In 10 years that is 20,000 deaths/state. I have worked for 5 major health systems (two Top 100 Heart Hospitals) and 4 large cardiovascular groups. CV disease accounts for almost half of U.S. annual death.

    In my entire career I am aware of only 2 deaths due to error in these facilities. One cardiology group treats over 150,000 patients a year and are very active members of the medical staffs of 5 urban hospitals - physicians who have practiced 15 years + likewise can only cite (privately and in confidence) 2-4 cases they are aware of in their career in all their hospitals by ANY phyician.

    Dr. Levy -your statement "In summary, the point of the entire session was to emphasize that final accountability for the quality and safety of patient care in a hospital lies with the CEO, with important backing from the Board of Trustees." was VERY strong and "spot-on".

    What number do you estimate nationwide? 1,000; 10,000; 100,000; 500,000?

    Also, how many auto deaths in the U.S. are "preventable"?
    Permalink 12/11/08 @ 11:49
    Comment from: Kristin Baird [Visitor] · http://www.baird-consulting.com
    Great article. I only wish I could have been in attendance to hear each of you speak.

    Those of us who have served in the clinical trenches, know that an error, even a small one, will haunt us for the remainder of our careers. The responsibility for creating and fostering a culture of safety lies squarely on the shoulders of senior leaders. It is refreshing to hear this point of view from hospital CEOs. Only when every healthcare employee adopts the mindset that each of us is accountable for a culture of safety will we see a big shift.
    Permalink 12/11/08 @ 14:29
    Comment from: James Reinertsen [Visitor] · http://www.reinertsengroup.com
    Paul Wiles, Greg Kutcher and Paul Levy showed all of us at the IHI CEO Summit what it looks like when CEOs take personal responsibility for everything that happens in their organizations, especially what goes wrong. Thank you.

    I think we don't see all the preventable deaths when we're practicing in the trenches, except perhaps when there's been a single glaring error with immediate catastrophic consequences, such as a blood banking mismatch. But when hospitals working in IHI's 100,000 Lives Campaign have done reviews of 50 or 100 consecutive deaths, specifically looking for patterns of deaths, they typically have found that a number of the deaths clearly were "not the hospital's finest moment" (e.g. a hospital-acquired infection tipped the balance, or poorly coordinated care delayed a critical diagnostic or therapeutic intervention, or an anticoagulant was poorly managed, leading to a hemorrhage). And a few of the deaths are clearly relatable to some single, major error or mishap. The exact total number of preventable deaths is unknown and perhaps unknowable, but I see no reason to quibble with the IOM's estimate of 44,000-98,000 annually in the US, except that it might be too low.

    The point is that when we look for preventable deaths, we start to see them. And what Paul Levy, Paul Wiles, and Greg Kutcher are saying is, once we see them, we must own them. And once we own the problem of preventable deaths, we must take responsibility for building safer, more reliable systems and cultures in our hospitals.
    Permalink 12/12/08 @ 12:44
    Comment from: Susan Eisner, MPH, CASAC [Visitor] · http://www.susaneisner.typepad.com
    Great article. I'd like to add another factor that contributes to medical errors in physicians and health providers: perfectionism and their fear of being wrong.

    Doctors often have a tough time admitting mistakes. Due to their inherent tendency to be perfectionists, and to the rigors of medical training to "get it right" and to what can be dire consequences if they don't, they fear owning up to their errors and being "found out" they aren't "perfect." This is a big problem when they get angry when challenged by well-meaning teammates, who may eventually stay silent and watch patients get harmed.

    This issue came up in a recent seminar I conducted for a Pediatrics department on perfectionism and medical errors, after the Chairman read a blog post I'd written on perfectionism being an unacknowledge sources of stress. He admitted mixing up medication orders on two patients, and a resident kindly pointed out his mistake. He was grateful a disaster was averted vs. feeling angry his authority was challenged by a resident.

    While this system-wide problem goes back to medical school training and changes need to begin there, a good place to begin "curing" this for now is for physicians to examine their drive for perfectionism, under which is low self-esteem that perfectionism compensates for. Such persons feel bad about themselves, though often not consciously, and are loathe to admit their imperfections. They see their glass as "half empty," and their work as "never good enough." Those with high self-esteem - vs. arrogance - have a "half full" glass, feel competent, and accept they'll make errors - part of the process. This makes them open to constructive feedback from others because it doesn't make them feel
    "bad."

    So in the end the solution, though not a simple one, is to work on raising one's self-esteem, one person at a time. Societies and groups heal when individuals get healthy. The work must start from within.



    Permalink 12/12/08 @ 13:52
    Comment from: Andrew Needleman [Visitor] · http://www.claricode.com
    Amazing article.

    I couldn't be more impressed with all three CEOs who took responsibility for horrible events that occurred in their hospitals - despite the potential for lawsuits.

    It's likely that at least one patient will be saved by a physician, nurse, or hospital executive who heard and was moved by these stories.
    Permalink 01/11/09 @ 16:41
    Comment from: S. Plachette, RN [Visitor]
    Patients are saved everyday by physicians, nurses and other personnel without a thought toward what our executives are doing, thinking or saying. It is what we do.

    Yes, those CEO's took responsibility, but not to worry, they cannot be sued by suing their facilities.

    Washing your hands properly is as old as the hills and equally important.

    Mr. Wiles story is 'heart wrenching'. But as others point out, there is more to this.

    Oh, and if you want bugs to go away, forget it. Ain't gonna' happen. The lobbys' can't let the FDA get rid of so called growth promoters in your food. Growth promoters are low level antibiotics...which allow bugs to mutate!

    How about we start with clean water and food?! Nope, too expensive!

    And to the commenter that thinks Mr. Wiles; et al, do not have and receive incentive bonuses, well; uh, yes he does. Reported 9 Jan, 2009, Mr. Wiles received a base salary of $900k, bonus of $829k, and benefits and deferred comp package of $304k. Go get 'em Paul!

    I am probably one of the few common people that believes he may actually deserve this amount of compensation. But seeing it from the inside as I have, and also finding myself with less compensation for the same position in a years time well, I think its time for Mr. Wiles to do a bit more confessing.

    And you exec types do know that the rest of us are quite aware of how it is that you qualify for those bonuses, right? You save your org. money! Save it anyway you can, as long as it can be passed off as or better yet circumvent: Best practice.

    When health care finally realizes that its' employees are central to the mission, and avows it's recognition of a cultures lost mythology, the mission will be accomplished better than they ever imagined! And you won't have to constantly blabber about a patients receiving a remarkable experience!



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