Cable and Fluid Line Management System Justine W. Carter Advisor: Richard Fries, Datex-Ohmeda.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Nutrition Support Specialist Dietitian
Advertisements

5pt Nutrients and oxygen Carbon dioxide Wastes Tissues, organs, and organ systems Trouble in cell Ville.
Patient Safety What is it? Why is it important? What are we doing? What is my part to play?
My Mom’s Legacy Our Mission Prevent medical errors by ensuring that patients and families have the KNOWLEDGE they need to promote a safe hospital experience.
Principles of Decontamination. Objectives Define contamination and decontamination Differentiate between the concepts of exposure and contamination Identify.
Medical Errors in the Hospital Amit Chatterjee, MD The Ohio State University July 21, 2009.
TIGER Standards & Interoperability Collaborative Informatics and Technology in Nursing.
Dr. ABDULLAH ABDU ALMIKHLAFY Assistant professor & Head of community medicine department Presented By University of Science & Technology Sana’a – Yemen.
Patient Safety: 10 Years After the Landmark IOM Report on Medical Errors: Significant Progress: Better tools, better reporting, but there is a long way.
Why barcode medications? Admin Rx at the Medical University of South Carolina.
Lean Education Error Proofing.
Project IMPACT IMPACT National Medical Association What African Americans Should Know About Clinical Trials You’ve Got the Power!
Medication Safety Panel Discussion and Workshop UofT’s IHI Open School Chapter The Problem: There are more deaths each year due to patient safety incidents.
Trigger Tools 4 th February 2009 Presenter: Liz Baines.
Population Health for Health Professionals. Module 1 The Perspective of Public Health.
Federal HIT Summit Nov 20, 2014 Washington, DC
Healthcare Errors Error is defined as the failure of a planned action to be completed as intended or the use of a wrong plan to achieve an aim. By IOM.
Patient Safety and Patient Identification Chris Ranger Partnership Development Manager (NHS Connecting for Health and Informing Healthcare)
The role of public health in achieving the “toward zero deaths - TZD” goals AASHTO Safety Leadership Forum V The Paris Hotel, Las Vegas, NV May 5, 2011.
NASOGASTRIC REHYDRATION SYSTEM By: Paige Reinhardt, Pam Hitscherich, Jon Gabriel, Gaby Bravoco, Josh Min.
The History of Public Health
Learning about Safe Systems Dr. Maureen Baker CBE DM FRCGP Clinical Director for Patient Safety NHS Connecting for Health.
Hospital Harm Index Presentation to MAPS Exploratory Work Group for Tracking Safety Progress April 10, 2013.
CMN – Ashneil Jain. Theses Points Leader in a Growing Industry Well Balanced Portfolio of Products Potential for Tremendous Growth.
Government Agencies Ben, Tyler, Gavin, and Kerry.
Add State HD Logo Here Preventing Falls Among Older Adults ADD YOUR STATE HEALTH DEPARTMENT NAME HERE.
Inova Loudoun Hospital ICU SAMANTHA MENDIGUREN. Critical Care Nurse ▪ Assigned one to two patients in the ICU. ▪ Checks on patients overall well being,
IV Tubing Organizer Blake Hondl, Amit Mehta, Ryan Pope, Kristen Sipsma, April Zehm, Katie Zenker BME 200/300 October 10, 2003.
Paradigm Shift in Healthcare – From Curative Care to Preventive Care Dr. Karl-Jürgen Schmitt Chairman of Task Force Structural Funds, COCIR.
Expanding the Patient Safety Paradigm: Engaging Minority Communities in Safer Healthcare Deborah Washington, PhD, RN September 11, 2012 AHRQ Annual Meeting.
IE497B Biomedical Device Engineering Dr. Richard A. Wysk 222 Leonhard Building Spring 2008.
Hospital Categorization: Role in Advancing Emergency Medicine Track D September 15, 2003 Barcelona Lewis R. Goldfrank, MD Professor and Chairman of Emergency.
| |
PATIENT SAFETY : WHY? THEERAPAN SONGNUY DOCTOR OF MEDICINE ( CHULALONGKORN U.) BOARD OF PEDIATRIC ALLERGY & IMMUNOLOGY CERTIFICATE OF FAMILY MEDICINE MASTER.
Why? Between 44,000 – 98,000 people die each year in the United States as the result of medical errors. This exceeds the number attributable to the 8 th.
Bibliography Amoore, J., Ingram, P. (2002, August). Quality improvement report: Learning from adverse incidents involving medical devices. British Medical.
Chapter 6. Toxicologist Detect and identify drugs and poisons in the body fluids, tissues, and organs and determine their influence on human behavior.
Copyright © 2012 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Chapter 10Safety Concerns in Healthcare.
MNA M osby ’ s Long Term Care Assistant Chapter 25 Nutritional Support and IV Therapy.
Group 4: Medical Intake Chair Jordan French, BME David McMillan, BME Tamim Sookoor, CompE Mr. Tim Clemons, Project Sponsor Dr. Paul King, Faculty Advisor.
Patient Hand-Offs Sheri S. Crow, MD, MS Assistant Professor of Pediatrics Critical Care Medicine Mayo Clinic Rochester, MN.
| |
Medical Errors Clinical Rotations.
THE HIT ADOPTIONINITIATIVE The George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services The Institute for Health Policy at MGH/Partners.
Disclosure of Medical Errors AND Risk Management
Focus Area 17: Medical Product Safety Progress Review November 5, 2003.
Improving Value in Health Care: Challenges and Potential Strategies Arnold M Epstein October 24, 2008 Congressional Health Care Reform Education Project.
Subacute Care Chapter 25 Subacute Care Care for Residents With Specific Needs Formerly cared for in Hospital Rehabilitation Complicated Respiratory Care.
JCAHO Patient Safety. Background 1999 Institute of Medicine report: “To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System”  Estimated 44,000 – 98,000 medical.
| |
11 MAJOR ORGAN SYSTEMS IN THE HUMAN BODY
Copyright © 2014 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Chapter 15 Medical Errors: An Ongoing Threat to Quality Health Care.
Smoking in The United States Alexandra M. Lippert 1/30/13 ECO 5550 Presentation.
Patient Safety By: Kim Peterson.
Nutrition Tube Feedings. Used for residents with certain medical problems (Digestive disease, cancer) Unable to swallow 3 types of enteral feedings –
Cable and Fluid Line Management System Justine W. Carter Advisor: Richard Fries, Datex-Ohmeda Dr. Paul King.
Cable and Fluid Line Management System Justine W. Carter Advisor: Richard Fries, Datex-Ohmeda.
Raj Woolever, MD Associate Program Director Central Maine Family Medicine Residency AAFP Family Medicine Global Health Workshop September 11, 2009.
Aidah Abu Elsoud Alkaissi BSc law, RN, RNT, BSN, MSN, CCRN, CRNA, PhD Head of Nursing & Midwifery Department Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences An-Najah.
[Hospital Name] is Going Tobacco-Free. Healing Inside and Out [Hospital Name] has joined a statewide initiative supported by the Massachusetts Hospital.
Visual Alarm System for Ohmeda Biox 3700 Pulse Oximeter Alex Choe Rohit Mittal Advisor: Dr. Walsh, Dr. Linstrom.
History of Health Information Technology in the U.S.
Science- Chapter 3 Body Systems
Quality Reporting in the Cardiothoracic ICU
Tobey Clark, Director*, Burlington USA
Cable and Fluid Line Management System
Medical Errors Zheng Yan Advised by: Dr. Dan France.
Heart Failure Currently, an estimated 5.7 million Americans are living with heart failure. An additional 670,000 new cases are diagnosed annually, up.
National Health Care Decision Day
Patient Safety and Health Informatics
Presentation transcript:

Cable and Fluid Line Management System Justine W. Carter Advisor: Richard Fries, Datex-Ohmeda

Medical Errors 2000 report of the Institute of Medicine (IOM), entitled To Err Is Human: Building A Safer Health System To Err Is Human: Building A Safer Health System 44,000 to 98,000 people die in hospitals each year as the result of medical errors. Medical Errors - eighth leading cause of death in this country— – higher than motor vehicle accidents (43,458), breast cancer (42,297), or AIDS (16,516).

The Cost of Medical Errors is Rising The IOM report – approximately $37.6 billion each year – about $17 billion associated with preventable errors. – no unified effort to address the problem of medical errors and patient safety, awareness of the issue has been growing.

Medical Error - Adverse Event An adverse event is defined – "an injury caused by medical management rather than by the underlying disease or condition of the patient.” 70 percent of adverse events found in a review of 1,133 medical records were preventable; – 6 percent were potentially preventable; – 24 percent were not preventable.

Need for new reorganized cable and line system in the ICU When patient is transported, moved, or turned over – Cables become tangled and/or disconnected – Untangling cables is time consuming – Misidentification of devices connected – Results in medical errors

Dee Snyder, 2003

ICU equipment Considerations IV pump - Water, sugar, vitamins, and medications are given Ventilator - Oxygen Feeding Tube - nose, throat, stomach, intestines nasogastric (NG) tube - nose, stomach – removes food or liquids from stomach Moniter wires - connected from patient to machine – heart, carbon dioxide,

Design System to Eliminate This Problem Multiparameter Cable Combines: ECG, SpO2 temperature

Neonatal Intensive Care Unit

Design Generalized Multiparameter Cable Combine Cables for – Heart Moniter – Cardiorespoiratry moniter – Pulse Oximeter – Carbon Dioxide Moniter – Respitory or Mechanical ventilator – IV Pumps Design Retractable Cable

Proposed Design for Cable and Line Centralizer

Current Status Researched similar devices Contacted Dr. Bill Walsh,Neonatology Preliminary sketch Researching Retractable Cord

Future Work Design final schematic Research product materials Research statistical information about medical errors Re-Visit Medical Center Research Retractable Cord System

References Medical Errors: The Scope of the Problem. Fact sheet, Publication No. AHRQ 00-P037. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. projektet/readymadedesign%20final.pdf areunit/index.html areunit/index.html Dr. Steve Robinson Dr. Bill Walsh

Intensive Care Unit patients connected to many cables and fluid lines