Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Madge Kaplan writes:

The next WIHI broadcast — Improving Safety and Satisfaction in Ambulatory Care — will take place on Thursday, November 7, from 2 to 3 PM ET, and I hope you'll tune in.
Our guests will include:
  • Gordon Schiff, MD, Associate Director, Brigham Center for Patient Safety Research and Practice, Brigham and Women's Hospital
  • Nicholas Leydon, MPH, Director, PROMISES Project, Massachusetts Department of Public Health
  • Frank Federico, RPh, Executive Director, Strategic Partners, Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)
  • Damian Folch, MD, Family Practice and Lifestyle Medicine (Chelmsford, MA)
Enroll Now
We don’t typically associate the ambulatory care setting with serious lapses in quality that threaten patient safety. Much of the improvement in recent years targeting outpatient care has focused on access, waiting times, communication, and coordination of care. But these areas ripe for change have often obscured others that, if not handled well, can have even more dire consequences: the ordering of tests, the timely handling and communication of results, and the overall process of making a diagnosis in response to a patient’s symptoms or complaints, including making referrals to specialists. 
With these issues in mind, we invite you to join the next WIHI on November 7, 2013: Improving Safety and Satisfaction in Ambulatory Care. On the program, we’re going to find out what’s been learned from a three-year initiative known as PROMISES, charged with reducing malpractice risk in the ambulatory setting by making care safer, more efficient, and more reliable. 
The WIHI panel will be headed up by the lead researcher for PROMISES, Dr. Gordon Schiff, who’s also the lead author of a recently published article in JAMA Internal Medicine ("Primary Care Closed Claims Experience of Massachusetts Malpractice Insurers") that found that the lion’s share of malpractice claims in Massachusetts primary care practices relate to allegations of misdiagnosis stemming, in part, from dropped balls with test results. This finding matches national trends, which is why the work of PROMISES, centered on making improvements at 16 sites, should resonate with many. Dr. Damian Folch worked on improvements at his practice in Chelmsford, MA, and he and other sites were coached by Improvement Advisors, including Nicholas Leydon. Because it’s rarely a matter of one thing that’s been missed or that can go wrong, IHI’s Frank Federico will help us understand why a systems approach is critical to managing the many things that transpire in the ambulatory setting, including careful tracking of prescribed medications.

This WIHI on PROMISES promises to be rich with results and real-world experience, and it will offer you ways to get involved to help shape and spread further change. Could your team use a PROMISES Patient Safety Curriculum? Would you like to explore becoming a Primary Care Patient Safety Innovator? Find out how and join the discussion on this next WIHI on Nov 7. Host Madge Kaplan and her guests are looking forward to your questions and hearing about your experiences.
I hope you'll join us! You can enroll for the broadcast here.

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