DVT Prevention and Anticoagulant Management

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
National Patient Safety Goal 3E:
Advertisements

Preventing VTE in Surgical Patients. Today’s Topics The common sense science of VTE prevention Brief history of VTE prevention techniques High yield methods.
National Patient Safety Goal 3E: Anticoagulation- Nursing Education.
{ ADVERSE DRUG REACTIONS To ensure patient, family/caregiver and home health personnel are instructed to identify adverse reactions to medications and.
Venous Thromboembolism Prevention August Venous Thromboembloism Prevention 2 Expected Practice  Assess all patients upon admission to the ICU for.
Venous Thromboembolism (VTE) Prophylaxis Policy Mary-Anne Davies Patient Safety Specialist Accreditation Coordinator.
Best Practices in Meeting NPSG 3E-Anticoagulation Requirements MaryAnne Cronin, PharmD Assistant Director of Pharmacy Glen Cove Hospital.
CMS Core Measures Evidence-Based Performance Measurement.
 When untreated, general postsurgical patients risk for Deep Venous Thrombosis (DVT) is 19%-25% (Buckner, et al., 2013).  Post surgical orthopedic patients.
Preventing Anticoagulation Errors with Clinical Dashboards Dan Johnson, Pharm.D., BCPS August 3, 2011.
Drug Utilization Review (DUR)
2.11 Conduct Medication Management University Medical Center Health System Lubbock, TX Jason Mills, PharmD, RPh Assistant Director of Pharmacy.
Title slide Georgia Hospital Engagement Network Healthcare Acquired Condition Affinity Group June 19, 2013 Presenter: Dr. Teresa Pounds, PharmD, BCNSP.
Ferris State University Nursing Research Presented by: Rebecca Enright, Jiali Luc, Jenny Parish, Ashley Weststrate.
Venous Thromboembolism Safety Tool Kit Brenda K. Zierler, PhD, RN, RVT University of Washington Medication Safety: Tools for Diverse Settings September.
Anticoagulation Safety: Meeting the Challenge of the National Patient Safety Goal 3E Larry Clark, PharmD, MS, BCPS Director of Pharmacy Thomas, McCloskey,
Managing Warfarin Drug Interactions: The Bayview Experience DAWN Users Group, November 2002 Charles H. Twilley, MBA, PharmD Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical.
2012 Quality and Patient Safety Performance Results Annual Report The Quality Committee of the Board Confidential & Privileged Peer Review Materials; Pages.
2015 National Patient Safety Goals and the Older Adult Julie Pope Nurs 4292 Spring I Columbus State University.
Recommended by the Sentinel Event Alert Advisory Group NATIONAL PATIENT SAFETY GOALS FY 2009.
Venous Thromboembolism (VTE) Prevention and Anticoagulation Management -Part 1: Thromboembolism & National Patient Safety Goal 3E Pharmacy Education.
Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care
IMPLEMENTING GUIDELINES AND REDUCING PATIENT RISK OF VENOUS THROMBOEMBOLISM IN A LARGE UK TEACHING HOSPITAL Sharron Millen, Head of Clinical Pharmacy and.
Preventing Surgical Complications Prevent Harm from High Alert Medication- Anticoagulants in Primary Care Insert Date here Presenter:
Scottish Patient Safety Programme – Pharmacist Engagement Gordon Thomson Arlene Coulson Shadi Botros.
LIFEBLOOD THE Thrombosis CHARITY LIFEBLOOD THE Thrombosis CHARITY NICE Clinical Guideline 46.
Medication Use Process Part One, Lecture # 5 PHCL 498 Amar Hijazi, Majed Alameel, Mona AlMehaid.
SPSP Medicines Paediatric Networking Event Prepared by: David Maxwell.
Safe and Effective Prescribing 2014 Senior Medics Training Pharmacy Department.
VTE prevention and anticoagulation practice VTE prevention and anticoagulation practice Mr A McSorley Lead Thrombosis Nurse RCHT.
Us Case 5 ICU Event with Pharmacy and Pt Monitoring and Follow-up Care by PCP Care Theme: Transitions of Care, Medical Device Integration Use Case 15 Interoperability.
Copyright © 2013, 2010 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 2 Application of Pharmacology in Nursing Practice.
Principles of Medication Administration and Medication Safety Chapter 7 Mosby items and derived items © 2010, 2007, 2004 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of.
Beyond ePrescribing Factors Influencing Patient Safety in Medical Group Practices - September 26 th, 2007 AHRQ 2007: Improving Healthcare, Improving Live.
Pre-Operative and Post-Operative Care
Mandatory Training: VTE prevention and anticoagulation practice Mandatory Training: VTE prevention and anticoagulation practice Mr A McSorley Lead Thrombosis.
Quality and Patient Safety Council May 27, 2014 Presented By Susan M. Blackhurst BS, RN & Eric Jean BSN, RN, CCRN.
 Deep Vein Thrombosis Josh Vrona, Hunter Dolan, Erin McCann.
Copyright © 2013, 2009, 2005 by Mosby, an imprint of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 19 Implementing Nursing Care.
The NHS Safety Thermometer 10 Steps to Success Series! Step 4 Understanding the Definitions.
The Implementation of Medication Reconciliation in PAC Enhancing Patient Safety The Implementation of Medication Reconciliation in PAC Enhancing Patient.
Non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants (NOACs)
Dr Thomas Lloyd F1 Dr Aman Hargehandewal Wrexham Maelor Hospital
‘Preventing and treating blood clots’ The South Tees Anticoagulation Team 1.
Spotlight Case Watch the Warfarin!. 2 Source and Credits This presentation is based on the July 2011 AHRQ WebM&M Spotlight Case –See the full article.
ADVERSE DRUG EVENT (ADE) Driver Diagram OHA HEN 2.0.
R EDUCING ALL CAUSE HARM Memorial Medical Center Port Lavaca, TX Presented By Erin Clevenger, RN.
Pharmacy Health Information Technology Collaborative Presenter: Shelly Spiro RPh, FASCP Pharmacy HIT Collaborative, Executive Director.
Timing of Post-discharge Venous Thromboembolic Events and Effect of Pharmacologic Prophylaxis in Hospitalized Patients Paul J. Grant MD, Todd Greene PhD,
ANTICOAGULATION The objectives of this section are: To be able to write prescriptions according to local anticoagulation guidelines To know how to prescribe.
NATIONAL PATIENT SAFETY GOALS Part 1
Patient Safety Overview 2014
Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis (VTE)
Medication Reconciliation and Reducing Adverse Drug Events
Ortho Warfarin Dosing Protocol
2.13 Copyright UKCS #
The Nursing Process and Pharmacology Jeanelle F. Jimenez RN, BSN, CCRN
OBMC Core Measures January 2015
Module 3 REDUCE THE LIKELIHOOD OF PATIENT HARM ASSOCIATED WITH THE USE OF ANTICOAGULANT THERAPY.
Medication Safety & Anticoagulation
Performance Improvement
Introduction to Clinical Pharmacology Chapter 9 Antibacterial Drugs That Interfere With DNA/RNA Synthesis.
Prevention and Management of Venous Thromboembolic Events in Patients With Multiple Myeloma.
GHS Outpatient Enoxaparin Program
ONLY oral unit-dose warfarin, prefilled Fragmin syringes, and premixed heparin drips are used at CHSB.
Introduction to Clinical Pharmacology Chapter 4 The Nursing Process
Use of Medications Safely
QUALITY: SAFE CARE Potentially Preventable Adverse Events and Complications of Care in Hospitals Among Medicare Beneficiaries, 2004–2005 Percent *Surgical.
Prevention and Management of Venous Thromboembolic Events in Patients With Multiple Myeloma.
Preventing Venous Thromboembolism Participating Hospital Survey
Presentation transcript:

DVT Prevention and Anticoagulant Management Aims Measures Literature Data

DVT Prevention and Anticoagulant Management Aims (What are we trying to accomplish?) Reduce the incidence of DVT and PE in hospitalized patients by 50% in one year. Reduce readmissions within 31 days for DVT and PE by 50% in one year. Reduce patient harm associated with the use of anticoagulant therapy by 50% in one year.

DVT Prevention and Anticoagulant Management Measures (How will we know that a change is an improvement?) Hospital Acquired DVT per 1000 Discharges Hospital Acquired PE per 1000 Discharges Readmissions within 31 Days with DVT per 1000 Discharges Readmissions within 31 Days with PE per 1000 Discharges Patient harm associated with anticoagulant therapy as measured by the IHI Adverse Drug Event Trigger Tool

DVT Prevention Clinical Goals Adult patients (18 & older) are assessed for VTE risk within 24 hours of admission Appropriate pharmacological and/or mechanical prophylaxis begins within 24 hrs of admission. Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis, June 2007, ICSI

DVT Prevention Clinical Goals All patients receive education regarding VTE signs & symptoms, preventive methods All patients begin early and frequent ambulation Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis, June 2007, ICSI

DVT Prevention Clinical Goals All adult medical/surgical patients with moderate-high-very high VTE risks receive anticoagulation prophylaxis unless contraindicated. Reduce the risk of complications from pharmacologic prophylaxis. Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis, June 2007, ICSI

DVT Prevention Clinical Goals Appropriate pharmacological and/or mechanical prophylaxis begins within 24 hrs of admission. Mechanical prophylaxis is used when pharmacologic prophylaxis is contraindicated. Appropriate precautions for patients receiving spinal or epidural anesthesia are implemented. Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis, June 2007, ICSI

National Patient Safety Goal 3E: Anticoagulation Reduce the likelihood of patient harm with the use of anticoagulation (AC) therapy. Applies to multiple inpatient and outpatient settings Rationale: Anticoagulation therapy is a high risk treatment Requirement: Reduce the likelihood of patient harm associated with the use of anticoagulation (AC) therapy. Applies to:Ambulatory Care, Critical Access Hospital, Home Care, Hospital, Long Term Care, and Office-Based Surgery.Rationale: Anticoagulation is a high risk treatment (complexity of dosing, monitoring of effects, ensuring patient compliance) which commonly leads to Adverse drug events (ADE’s). Use of standardized practices with patient involvement can reduce the risk of ADE’s.

NPSG 3E Implementation Expectations: Implement a defined AC program Use ONLY oral UD products/pre-mixed IV’s Warfarin is dispensed for each patient with established monitoring Use approved protocols for the initiation & maintenance of AC therapy Implementation Expectations: The organization implements a defined AC program to individualize the care provided to each patient receiving anticoagulation therapy. To reduce compounding and labeling errors, the organization uses ONLY oral unit dose products and pre-mixed infusions, when these products are available. When pharmacy services are provided by the organization, warfarin is dispensed for each patient in accordance with established monitoring procedures. The organization uses approved protocols for the initiation & maintenance of AC therapy appropriate to the medication used, condition being treated and potential for drug interactions.

NPSG 3E Implementation Expectations: Warfarin – baseline/current INR Dietary services notification of pt’s receiving warfarin Heparin IV by a programmable IV pump Policy addresses baseline & ongoing lab tests for Heparin/LMWH Implementation Expectations cont: For pt’s starting warfarin, a baseline International Normalized Ratio (INR) is available; for all pt’s on warfarin, a current INR is available & used to monitor & adjust therapy. When dietary services are provided, the service is notified of all pt’s receiving warfarin & responds according to its food/drug interaction program. When heparin is administered intravenously and continuously, the organization uses programmable infusion pumps. The organization has a policy that addresses baseline & ongoing lab tests required for heparin and low molecular weight heparin therapies.

NPSG 3E Implementation Expectations: Education for Anticoagulation therapy: prescribers, staff, patients and families. Pt./family education covers specific areas Evaluation of Anticoagulation safety practices. Implementation Expectations cont: The organization provides education regarding anticoagulant therapy to prescribers, staff, patients and families. Pt./family education includes the importance of follow-up monitoring, compliance issues, dietary restrictions and potential adverse drug reactions and interactions. The organization evaluates anticoagulation safety practices.

Baseline Measures Time Frame: FY 07 Hospital Acquired DVT per 1000 Discharges Hospital Acquired PE per 1000 Discharges Readmissions with DVT per 1000 Discharges Readmissions with PE per 1000 Discharges Time Frame: FY 07