Clinical Topics
SHM’s Center for Quality Improvement focuses on projects for specific clinical topics. Explore to find guides, webinars and resources on related clinical topics.
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View SHM's Center for Quality Improvement Webinar from June 18, 2019. Learn about Length of Stay reduction from two expert panelists. They discuss how they are involved in programs at their institutions to address this topic and how you can introduce the same success. By viewing the webinar recording you are eligible to receive CME and MOC credits.
SHM’s Center for Quality Improvement offers a personalized approach to quality and patient safety through an integrated, comprehensive and flexible menu of programs, tools and resources. Each can be tailored to the specific needs of your institution over a wide breadth of clinical topics and can be combined into various configurations that best suit your institution.
SHM has established methods of improving care in hospitals and developed proven solutions that increase efficiency and transform the delivery system in the process. Whether you’re just learning about the quality improvement process or already a leader in the field, SHM’s resources can guide you through your intervention.
If you need assistance on where to start, Quality 101 provides information to help you build the case for quality, engage your leaders in quality and patient safety initiatives, and assess whether your institution is ready for change.
SHM’s Center for Quality Improvement focuses on projects for specific clinical topics. Explore to find guides, webinars and resources on related clinical topics.
The Society of Hospital Medicine’s (SHM’s) Quality 101 resources draw from the knowledge and experience of renowned national experts in the field of quality and patient safety. Quality 101 showcases 8 important points critical to the success of quality improvement in the hospital.
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Engaging leaders and peers in quality and patient safety initiatives is a key component to ensuring successful outcomes. To obtain support, you will need to:
One suggested approach is enlisting an “executive sponsor” (e.g., CEO, CMO, CNO) or administrative champion of the project. This sponsor should receive regular updates on the project (or ideally attend committee meetings) and be an advocate for the project to hospital leadership.
An executive sponsor is invaluable in helping the team focus on critical issues. However, it is equally important that the team understands where it fits in the overall quality improvement structure and priority for the organization. Teams are frequently assembled during a crisis but need a plan that keeps them connected so that improvements made are sustainable and regularly reviewed. It is useful to ask the executive sponsor to review progress and outline barriers.
Peer engagement is equally important and requires building buy-in from colleagues who can support your initiative at a grassroots level and influence others to do the same.
A critical component of success is engaging your leaders and peers in conducting a readiness assessment to determine whether your institution has the infrastructure and support needed to embark upon a new initiative.
Assessment Survey on Patient Safety
Healthcare organizations can use this survey tool to:
Improvement activities are often initiated by an individual or a few individuals who recognize a gap in quality of care. Recruiting additional members who have firsthand experience with the issue or content expertise to the improvement team can help to overcome challenges, enhance interaction and stimulate the brainstorming of solutions.
The leader of a team is a permanent role for the life of the team. He or she should:
The team leader requests assistance from a team facilitator when the team is struggling with its ability to work together and use effective team meeting skills.
The most effective teams have a trained team facilitator in a permanent role to meet with them and guide their use of meeting skills and tools. If assigned, the facilitator should be present at most meetings, especially in the early stages of development when the team is learning how to work together and use the improvement tools. If a permanent facilitator is not assigned to the team, then one should be available to assist the team when members are struggling with team processes or when they need advice or skill training to effectively use problem-solving tools.
The facilitator:
The involvement of the facilitator normally diminishes as the team members and team leader gain more knowledge and skills about team processes and tools.
Effective teams usually include four to six members, including the team leader. The team may be larger, but the time commitment usually increases, and the speed with which the team begins to perform is slower.
Team members are normally selected because they represent a part of the cross-functional process that is being improved. Sometimes, a team member from outside of the process is included to give the process “fresh eyes.” All members have a responsibility to participate and share their knowledge with mutual respect for other team members. Team members will also rotate to fulfill the roles or recorder or timekeeper at each meeting.
The recorder is a rotated position selected at the beginning of each team meeting based on the ground rules. The primary role of the recorder is to:
Sometimes it is helpful to select two recorders when a lot of information needs to be logged.
Every team member should be encouraged to fill this role and be applauded for the patience and listening skills it requires. The recorder is a full participant in the team process while they are recording. Sometimes the team leader and other members need to make sure that the recorder is participating.
The timekeeper is also a rotated position selected at the beginning of each team meeting based on the ground rules. The primary role of the timekeeper is to call out the time remaining on each agenda item at intervals the team determines is appropriate when developing their ground rules. In this way, the timekeeper assists the team in staying on task and managing its time effectively.
Identifying and including stakeholders in your project team from the beginning is critical for success. It is important to identify existing committees or teams in the hospital that are already working to improve related clinical topics or processes and determine how to link to or integrate existing efforts.
Team membership may include:
It is essential to include individuals who are invested in and see the value standardizing the process. Also, consider including patients/families as content experts on your team, as they have a perspective that is unique and critical to all the efforts of your team.
At your very first team meeting, it is key to establish the team “rules” and ensure that everyone explicitly agrees with them.
In addition to these rules, it should be made very clear that potential members should notify the leader immediately if they cannot devote the requisite time and effort so that a suitable replacement can be found. Timely minutes as well as a quick turnaround for comments/corrections should be the rule.
Establishing substantive goals is essential for maintaining focus and motivating the team.
Your aims should be specific, measurable and time-defined and should specify the population or populations for whom you want to improve care. A "stretch" goal should be established that should be aggressive enough to mandate a change in the design of your current process to achieve it. Until you have reliable metrics and a baseline evaluation, however, team-supported general aims or goals can be important for galvanizing action and establishing clarity of purpose.
Examples of General Aims:
As your team develops, your challenge will be to define many of the terms in your general aim, which will entail developing defined metrics and more mature, specific, time-defined aims. For example, what aspects of the process or issue do you want to improve first? What are the factors that lead to lower quality or an unsafe condition? How can you educate caregivers about these issues?
Data collection, analysis and presentation are essential to the success of any quality improvement program. Measurement is a critical part of testing and implementing changes.
Use a balanced set of measures for all improvement efforts: outcomes measures, process measures, and balancing measures.
How does the system impact the values of patients, their health and wellbeing? What are impacts on other stakeholders such as payers, employees, or the community?
Examples:
Are the parts/steps in the system performing as planned? Are you on track in your efforts to improve the system?
Examples:
Looking at a system from different directions/dimensions
Are changes designed to improve one part of the system causing new problems in other parts of the system?
Examples:
When defining interventions to improve quality, it is critical to reduce variation in the way care processes are implemented. The key concept is routine. Doing a complex activity the same way each time is the best way to make sure nothing is left out.
The following is a review of some principles for effective implementation of interventions:
For educational modules about quality improvement, visit the SHM Learning Portal under “Hospital Quality and Patient Safety.” Topics include:
SHM members can also share questions, challenges and successes with other hospital-based caregivers across the country through the Hospital Medicine Exchange (HMX) online forum.
Contact SHM with any further question or inquiries you may have.
The Society of Hospital Medicine serves as an invaluable resource to help hospital leaders and clinicians in meeting the challenge of providing the highest quality of patient care amid rapid transformational change. Download SHM's Center for Quality Improvement Brochure to learn more.
"SHM’s Center for Quality Improvement is unique in that it has implemented change in performance at the front lines in hospitals across the U.S. and Canada. SHM is committed to the continued support of these clinical champions, its members and the development of additional hospitalist leaders needed to transform healthcare,”
Eric Howell MD, MHM