THE JOINT COMMISSION Patient safety one of the driving forces of healthcare. Patient safety is defined as, “ the absence of preventable harm to a patient during the process of healthcare or as the prevention of errors and adverse events caused by the provision of healthcare rather than the patient’s underlying disease process. (Kangasniemi, Vaismoradi, Jasper, &Turunen, 2013)”. It was just as important in the past as it is day. Our healthcare field continues to strive to make improvement toward safer care for patients across the country. The Joint Commission was founded in 1951 with the goal to provided safer and better care to all. Since that day it has become acknowledged as the leader in developing the highest standards for quality …show more content…
For the purposes of this paper, the author will only focus on National Patient Safety Goals 01.01.01: Identifying patients correctly and 01.03.01 Eliminate transfusion errors related to patient misidentification. NPGS 01.01.01: Identifying Patients Correctly In 2003, The Joint Commission made one of their first goals to improve the accuracy of identifying patients to reduce or eliminate patient identification errors. This continues to be an accreditation requirement. Their recommendations to do this are to use at least two patient identifiers when administering medications, and when providing treatments or procedures. Acceptable identifiers may be the individual’s name, an assigned identification number, telephone number, or other person-specific identifier. Patient room number or physical location may not be used as an appropriate identifier. Healthcare provides should re-identify the patient with each encounter, each medication pass, and each procedure. There have been procedures and protocols throughout the country have been put into place to make the care provided to patients safer. Another element of this requirement is that all containers should be labeled in the patients presences after using the patient identifiers
Available prior to the start of the procedure Correctly identified, labeled, and matched to the patient’s identifiers Reviewed and are consistent with the patient’s expectations and with the team’s understanding of the intended patient, procedure, and site (UP.01.01.01 p. 13)”
4.) double check you have the correct patient by having them say their name ,date of birth and possibly other basic information to prevent reveal of private health information
Goal 1: Identify your patients correctly. Using two patient identifiers ensures that you provide the right care to your patients.
The National Patient Safety Goals were created in response to the IOM article, To Err is Human: Building Safer Health Systems. These goals were written to address patient safety and are tailored depending on the health care setting to which they are written for. They address system wide solutions rather than focusing on whom or how the error was made. Medical errors have been noted as being the 8th leading cause of death in the U.S. with the most frequent of these errors being medication related (Johnson, K., Bryant, C., Jenkins, M., Hiteshew, C., & Sobol, K. 2010). Therefore a great focus on these goals is needed across the health care continuum. The goals are updated and amended on a regular basis using evidence-based research, in response to areas with high errors in patient safety.
This paper will discuss the National Patient Safety Goal NPSG 0.7.06.01 entitled “ Use proven guidelines to prevent infection of the urinary tract that are caused by catheter” (The Joint Commission, 2015). It will identify reasons why this National Patient Safety Goal was chosen as well as the type of organizations that utilize urinary catheters. It will look into the cost of implementing an educational process compared with the hospital cost of Catheter-Associated Urinary Infections (CAUTI). The Advanced Practice Nurse (APN) will demonstrate a method on how to gather data, design educational tool, implement standard practice and create a committee by collaborating with other health care disciplines. The effectiveness of the educational process will be evaluated through data collection and analysis. Finally, future health care delivery implications will be explored.
Patient safety is of utmost importance in healthcare. As healthcare providers we are all human, and therefore we all error, having a system that will double check our actions for said errors would be of great value. Technology in healthcare is developed with the intent to combat exactly that. The role of technology continues beyond the detection of human error and plays an overall significant part in keeping and maintaining patients’ safety.
This paper, will discuss the National Patient Safety Goal NPSG 0.7.06.01 entitled “ Use proven guidelines to prevent infection of the urinary tract that are caused by catheter” (The Joint Commission, 2015). It will identify reasons why this National Patient Safety Goal was chosen as well as the type of organizations that utilize urinary catheters. It will look into financial implications of implementing educational process versus the hospital cost of Catheter-Associated Urinary Infections (CAUTI). The Advanced Practice Nurse (APN) will demonstrate method on how to gather data, design educational tool, implement standard practice and create a committee by collaborating with other health care discipline. Effectiveness of the educational process will be evaluated through data collection. Finally, future health care delivery implications will be explored.
Example: Identify patients correctly: NPSG.01.01.01-Use at least two ways to identify patients. For example, use the patient’s name and date of birth. This is done to make sure that each patient gets the correct medicine and treatment
The core purpose of the national patient safety goals is to indeed promote and improve patient safety. The Joint Commission (2015) lists several of them in its 2015 National Patient Safety Goals. One of the goals the author wants to elaborate more upon is: prevent mistakes in surgery. This paper will include an overview about the aforementioned national patient safety goal. It includes three methods to be followed to be able to achieve the said safety goal. The paper also highlights the importance of the issue to the general public, to the health care institutions, and to the health care professionals. Financial implications of not achieving the goal is also explored in this paper. This national patient safety goal is a multidisciplinary issue. The important roles of other professionals will be discussed as well as nursing leadership.
In health care settings across the country patient care is compromised by various preventable mistakes. Health care workers (HCW) are continuously pushing the boundaries of time constraints. As these demands are increased the possibility for poor patient outcomes also increase. Prevention is the first line of defense and promotes healthy practices for HCW and patients. The Joint Commission (TJC) collects data pertaining to the incidences, information surrounding each case and establishes a national quality and safety standard. TJC accredits thousands of health care establishments with the goal to provide safety and increase the quality of care provided in each setting. In 2016 TJC released a new set of National Patient Safety Goals (NPSG). The goals are meant to bring awareness to the accredited facilities and HCW of concerning hazards that need to be focused on. For instance, using two identifiers when identifying a patient to prevent medical errors, and preforming hand hygiene to reduce the risk of infections.
Mistakes are made in the healthcare field every day and there are a few ways that this can be prevented. We are going to discuss different ways to decrease the chances of errors for the safety of our patients. Every facility has or should have, somewhere in the building, a copy of the national patient safety goals and it is important that you know what they are and where to find them. As we navigate through the goals that are to be discussed, we will touch on a few that are very important from reducing the risk of healthcare associated infections to improving the accuracy of resident identification. With all this in mind we can greatly reduce the risk we put or patients in every day.
I agree with your post. Two patient identifiers are very important in a health care setting, to make sure each patient gets the right medication, treatment and services. Preventing of infection is another patient safety goal to maintain among healthcare providers. Every health care setting must follow CDC standard precautions to prevent or improve hand cleaning, and prevent infections of the
I have chosen the Hospital National Patient Safety Goals. One goal is improve the accuracy of patient identification. The Joint Commission wants hospitals to use at least two patient identifiers when providing care, treatment, and services. I believe that the person, who is checking in the patient, needs to be made aware of the importance of this process. One way would be to request two pieces of personal identification. Fraud is happening everywhere and requesting two pieces of identification might make this less likely to happen. Every person that comes in contact with the patient needs to check their identification bracelet with the medical record, orders and prescriptions. The HIM professional manages the master patient index and must
When analyzing the degree of alignment between the nurse’s current practice and best practice, it is undeniable that there are many differences. For one, the nurse does did not ask Mark to state his name and date of birth before scanning his wristband. The issue with skipping this crucial step in the MAP is that it could lead to a patient receiving the incorrect medication for a variety of reasons, which could thereby lead to the development of adverse side effects and possibly even death (Jo, Marquard, Clarke, & Henneman, 2013). To prevent this negative outcome from occurring, best practice states that Mark’s nurse should have used two acceptable patient identifiers when administering his medications. These identifiers include, but are not
After reviewing the 2014 Patient Safety Goals, the one that drawn my attention the most, is the Patient Identification goal. The article that I chose is Patient Safety Solutions. This article was written back in May 2007. This article is about the failure to identified patients correctly and the consequences that occur as a results. Some of the bad outcomes as a result of such failures include, patients received wrong blood transfusion, laboratory received wrong blood for different patients. There were wrong patients being operated on, and patients were given wrong medications.