This won't occur with stroke survivors because hospitals don't want to know how badly they are failing their patients.
http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/story/use-patients-families-experts-improve-quality/2014-10-30?
Hospitals could improve quality and safety if they engaged patients and their families in improvement initiatives, experts say.
Patients and family members "possess intricate knowledge and vastly
different perspectives on care processes, communication and coordination
systems," H&HN Daily reported,
citing discussion from the Quality & Patient Safety Roadmap hosted
by the American Hospital Association's Symposium for Leaders in
Healthcare Quality.
But most hospitals haven't been able to leverage that "huge untapped
potential" for improvement initiatives because they haven't effectively
engaged patients and families, according to the roadmap.
One hospital system that has had success is Vidant Health in
Greenville, N.C., which involves patient and family advisers "from the
bedside to the boardroom," Vidant adviser Dorothea Handron says in the H&HN
article. They participate on quality teams, review patient materials,
join safety rounds, help with facility design and development of the
electronic health record patient portal, and formally advise the board.
As a result, Vidant reports it has reduced serious safety events by 83
percent and hospital-acquired infections by 62 percent.
Roadmap discussion also focused on "hardwiring processes" such as
checklists into the organizational culture to build high-reliability
organizations, H&HN reported.
High-reliability organizations "employ human factors integration;
they make it obvious to do the right thing and impossible to do the
wrong thing," according to the article. "As a result, processes are
immune to inevitable human errors."
Other medical groups also are studying how to build high-reliability
organizations. American Anesthesiology focused its efforts on the
operating room (OR), where it recommended empowering patient-safety champions who train the rest of the OR team to develop a safety-first culture.
In Connecticut, hospitals are taking a page from the aviation and nuclear-power sectors to develop systemic routines that reduce medical errors and improve safety and patient experience.
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