KPI, Key Performance Indicator
Click here to know more:
- The improvement in quality of anesthesia services can be brought about by many measures.
- There is no end to the number of quality indicators has been observed by various literary observations.
- Identify barriers associated with performance improvement initiatives.
- Understand anesthesiology related quality improvement and patient safety indicators and how to improve individual clinical practice to meet departmental and national standards.
KPI for the last year and this year
- Post-Operative Pain Score ≤4 at 15 mins after admission at PACU.
- Post-Operative Pain Score ≤4 at 30 mins after admission at PACU.
- Post-Operative Nausea & Vomiting incidence in Elective & Emergency Cases.
- Antibiotic Compliance in Electively operated cases.
- Normoglycemia in Electively operated cases.
- Normothermia in Non-Electively operated cases.
Goals
- The ultimate goal would be to provide quality care with no harm to each and every perioperative patient at HMC. Our department has long been a leader in driving the research that ultimately improves the quality of patient care.
- Promote a culture of safety to maintain a safe and professional work environment for anaesthesiology residents.
- Teach key principles of quality improvement methodologies and facilitate efforts to optimize quality of care for patients and families.
- Disseminate quality improvement and patient safety indicators relevant to the practice of anesthesiology and raise awareness of individual and departmental practice relative to national performance and standards.
- Attributes of QI: Appropriateness, availability, continuity, effectiveness, efficacy, prevention, respect and caring, safety, timeliness
- QI Using Automated Data Sources
The Quality Improvement (QI) committee:
Includes faculty, residents and technicians from the department. Members evaluate cases from our self-reporting system. We are committed to develop local performance measures in quality and safety that can be compared with national and peer-group benchmarks to identify future improvement areas. And finally, by encouraging active participation at the meeting and during our M&M conference, we want to engage our trainees to learn about, participate in and lead quality projects.
Objectives:
Quality committee brings together members from anesthesia to develop insights and recommendations on how to improve perioperative patient safety. Anesthesia staff will be able to:
- Identify patient safety concerns & opportunities for improvement in healthcare systems.
- Understand the adverse event reporting and review processes used by the Department of Anesthesiology.
- Apply quality improvement methods and work in interdisciplinary teams aimed to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of patient care systems.
- To Improve our understanding of recognition, rescue, and resilience in the deteriorating perioperative patient.
- Develop ideas and recommendations that will lead to solutions to end “failure to rescue”.
Quality and Safety Improvement Committee improvement efforts included:
- Implementation of a standardized pre-procedure “time-out” prior to invasive procedures performed by the anesthesia care team
- Improvement of communication processes for transport of our most critically ill patients between the operating room and intensive care units
- Introduction of Emergency Manuals to provide guidelines that help clinicians with crisis management in specific situations of uncommon but life-threatening emergencies
- Standardization of handoff processes and workflows whenever a change in anesthesia provider occurs
- Standardization of operating room anesthesia tray set up and turnover processes between cases