Tuesday, February 4, 2014

It's been four years since I wrote about the spectacular (yes, spectacular) work being done by the hospitals in Ohio, where the slogan was, "We compete on everything, but we don't compete on safety."  In particular, the pediatric hospitals were setting the standard with a collaboration called Ohio Children’s Hospitals’ Solutions for Patient Safety.

I just received an update on their efforts, and, again, the only appropriate word is "Bravo!"  The themes that continue to be reinforced are collaboration, high reliability concepts and quality improvement science methods, transparency, and modesty.  Note to policy-makers, this is not occurring because of government regulation:  It is happening because the clinical, administrative, and governance leaders in these organizations want to make it happen.

A colleague writes:

We’ve dropped the “Ohio” to better reflect the national scope of our work. We’re still keeping “Ohio Children’s Hospitals’ Solutions for Patient Safety” for the Ohio-specific work that the 8 original Ohio-based hospitals are doing, but the national work on preventing HACs and creating a “culture of safety” at pediatric institutions across the nation will now be done under the SPS banner.

Here's the description from their website:

We are a network of 78 children’s hospitals across the United States who share the vision that no child will ever experience serious harm while we are trying to heal them.

We believe that by putting aside competition and sharing our safety successes and failures, we can achieve our goals faster.

We all learn from and all teach each other to ensure every child is safe in our care, every day.

Please check out the recently issued annual briefing, which outlines their accomplishments during the past year and briefly explains where they're heading in 2014.

Related Posts:

  • Who is being punished, and by whom?An excellent political cartoon by Tom Toles at the Washington Post, consistent with my post entitled "Stupid and Cruel, both," published last May.My thoughts at the time:One of the signs of political sickness in America is th… Read More
  • When "going viral" is a double, no triple, entendreMy friend Rumi Chunara writes about a fascinating research project she is working on at Boston Children's Hospital (funded by the National Science Foundation). She's looking for people from Massachusetts to sign up.Flu Near Y… Read More
  • Spinning like a topRobert Pear at the New York Times offers a clear summary of a recent report by civil servants at the Medicare agency: "National health spending grew slowly for the fourth consecutive year, increasing 3.7 percent in 2012 to $2… Read More
  • Snow dogs!As they traverse the country, snow storms often bring up lovely thoughts among pet owners.A friend from the Midwest writes:My old dog (age 12+) acts like she is 2 when there’s snow like this – makes me hope that my last wal… Read More
  • Focus on the gold standardI'd like to make a number of subtle and not-so-subtle points today, and I hope you'll stick with me.A friend and I have ongoing debates about whether Obamacare will make a difference in the practice of medicine in the US and … Read More

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Blog Archive

Powered by Blogger.

Popular Posts