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Application of RCA & FMEA in the Healthcare Industry (Essay Sample)

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COMPETENCIES 734.3.1 : Principles of Leadership The graduate applies principles of leadership to promote high-quality healthcare in a variety of settings through the application of sound leadership principles. 734.3.2 : Interdisciplinary Collaboration The graduate applies theoretical principles necessary for effective participation in an interdisciplinary team. 734.3.3 : Quality and Patient Safety The graduate applies quality improvement processes intended to achieve optimal healthcare outcomes, contributing to and supporting a culture of safety. INTRODUCTION Healthcare organizations accredited by the Joint Commission are required to conduct a root cause analysis (RCA) in response to any sentinel event, such as the one described in the scenario attached below. Once the cause is identified and a plan of action established, it is useful to conduct a failure mode and effects analysis (FMEA) to reduce the likelihood that a process would fail. As a member of the healthcare team in the hospital described in this scenario, you have been selected as a member of the team investigating the incident. SCENARIO It is 3:30 p.m. on a Thursday and Mr. B, a 67-year-old patient, arrives at the six-room emergency department (ED) of a sixty-bed rural hospital. He has been brought to the hospital by his son and neighbor. At this time, Mr. B is moaning and complaining of severe pain to his (L) leg and hip area. He states he lost his balance and fell after tripping over his dog. Mr. B was admitted to the triage room where his vital signs were B/P 120/80, HR-88 (regular), T-98.6, and R-32, and his weight was recorded at 175 pounds. Mr. B. states that he has no known allergies and no previous falls. He states, “My hip area and leg hurt really bad. I have never had anything like this before.” Patient rates pain at 10 out of 10 on the numerical verbal pain scale. He appears to be in moderate distress. His (L) leg appears shortened with swelling (edema in the calf), ecchymosis, and limited range of motion (ROM). Mr. B’s leg is stabilized and then is further evaluated and discharged from triage to the emergency department (ED) patient room. He is admitted by Nurse J. Nurse J finds that Mr. B has a history of impaired glucose tolerance and prostate cancer. At Mr. B’s last visit with his primary care physician, laboratory data revealed elevated cholesterol and lipids. Mr. B’s current medications are atorvastatin and oxycodone for chronic back pain. After Mr. B’s assessment is completed, Nurse J informs Dr. T, the ED physician, of admission findings, and Dr. T proceeds to examine Mr. B. Staffing on this day consists of two nurses (one RN and one LPN), one secretary, and one emergency department physician. Respiratory therapy is in-house and available as needed. At the time of Mr. B’s arrival, the ED staff is caring for two other patients. One patient is a 43-year-old female complaining of a throbbing headache. The patient rates current pain at 4 out of 10 on numerical verbal pain scale. The patient states that she has a history of migraines. She received treatment, remains stable, and discharge is pending. The second patient is an eight-year-old boy being evaluated for possible appendicitis. Laboratory results are pending for this patient. Both of these patients were examined, evaluated, and cared for by Dr. T and are awaiting further treatment or orders. After evaluation of Mr. B, Dr. T writes the order for Nurse J to administer diazepam 5 mg IVP to Mr. B. The medication diazepam is administered IVP at 4:05 p.m. After five minutes, the diazepam appears to have had no effect on Mr. B, and Dr. T instructs Nurse J to administer hydromorphone 2 mg IVP. The medication hydromorphone is administered IVP at 4:15 p.m. After five minutes, Dr. T is still not satisfied with the level of sedation Mr. B has achieved and instructs Nurse J to administer another 2 mg of hydromorphone IVP and an additional 5 mg of diazepam IVP. The physician’s goal is for the patient to achieve skeletal muscle relaxation from the diazepam, which will aid in the manual manipulation, relocation, and alignment of Mr. B’s hip. The hydromorphone IVP was administered to achieve pain control and sedation. After reviewing the patient’s medical history, Dr. T notes that the patient’s weight and current regular use of oxycodone appear to be making it more difficult to sedate Mr. B. Finally, at 4:25 p.m., the patient appears to be sedated, and the successful reduction of his (L) hip takes place. The patient appears to have tolerated the procedure and remains sedated. He is not currently on any supplemental oxygen. The procedure concludes at 4:30 p.m.,and Mr. B is resting without indications of discomfort and distress. At this time, the ED receives an emergency dispatch call alerting the emergency department that the emergency rescue unit paramedics are enroute with a 75-year-old patient in acute respiratory distress. Nurse J places Mr. B on an automatic blood pressure machine programmed to monitor his B/P every five minutes and a pulse oximeter. At this time, Nurse J leaves Mr. B’s room. The nurse allows Mr. B’s son to sit with him as he is being monitored via the blood pressure monitor. At 4:35 p.m., Mr. B’s B/P is 110/62 and his O2 saturation is 92%. He remains without supplemental oxygen and his ECG and respirations are not monitored. Nurse J and the LPN on duty have received the emergency transport patient. They are also in the process of discharging the other two patients. Meanwhile, the ED lobby has become congested with new incoming patients. At this time, Mr. B’s O2 saturation alarm is heard and shows “low O2 saturation” (currently showing a saturation of 85%). The LPN enters Mr. B’s room briefly, resets the alarm, and repeats the B/P reading. Nurse J is now fully engaged with the emergency care of the respiratory distress patient, which includes assessments, evaluation, and the ordering of respiratory treatments, CXR, labs, etc. At 4:43 p.m., Mr. B’s son comes out of the room and informs the nurse that the “monitor is alarming.” When Nurse J enters the room, the blood pressure machine shows Mr. B’s B/P reading is 58/30 and the O2 saturation is 79%. The patient is not breathing and no palpable pulse can be detected. A STAT CODE is called and the son is escorted to the waiting room. The code team arrives and begins resuscitative efforts. When connected to the cardiac monitor, Mr. B is found to be in ventricular fibrillation. CPR begins immediately by the RN, and Mr. B is intubated. He is defibrillated and reversal agents, IV fluids, and vasopressors are administered. After 30 minutes of interventions, the ECG returns to a normal sinus rhythm with a pulse and a B/P of 110/70. The patient is not breathing on his own and is fully dependent on the ventilator. The patient’s pupils are fixed and dilated. He has no spontaneous movements and does not respond to noxious stimuli. Air transport is called, and upon the family’s wishes, the patient is transferred to a tertiary facility for advanced care. Seven days later, the receiving hospital informed the rural hospital that EEG’s had determined brain death in Mr. B. The family had requested life-support be removed, and Mr. B subsequently died. Additional information: The hospital where Mr. B. was originally seen and treated had a moderate sedation/analgesia (“conscious sedation”) policy that requires that the patient remains on continuous B/P, ECG, and pulse oximeter throughout the procedure and until the patient meets specific discharge criteria (i.e., fully awake, VSS, no N/V, and able to void). All practitioners who perform moderate sedation must first successfully complete the hospital’s moderate sedation training module. The training module includes drug selection as well as acceptable dose ranges. Additional (backup) staff was available on the day of the incident. Nurse J had completed the moderate sedation module. Nurse J had current ACLS certification and was an experienced critical care nurse. Nurse J’s prior annual clinical evaluations by the manager demonstrated that the nurse was “meeting requirements.” Nurse J did not have a history of negligent patient care. Sufficient equipment was available and in working order in the ED on this day. REQUIREMENTS Your submission must be your original work. No more than a combined total of 30% of the submission and no more than a 10% match to any one individual source can be directly quoted or closely paraphrased from sources, even if cited correctly. An originality report is provided when you submit your task that can be used as a guide. You must use the rubric to direct the creation of your submission because it provides detailed criteria that will be used to evaluate your work. Each requirement below may be evaluated by more than one rubric aspect. The rubric aspect titles may contain hyperlinks to relevant portions of the course. A. Explain the general purpose of conducting a root cause analysis (RCA). 1. Explain each of the six steps used to conduct an RCA, as defined by IHI. 2. Apply the RCA process to the scenario to describe the causative and contributing factors that led to the sentinel event outcome. B. Propose a process improvement plan that would decrease the likelihood of a reoccurrence of the scenario outcome. 1. Discuss how each phase of Lewin’s change theory on the human side of change could be applied to the proposed improvement plan. C. Explain the general purpose of the failure mode and effects analysis (FMEA) process. 1. Describe the steps of the FMEA process as defined by IHI. 2. Complete the attached FMEA table by appropriately applying the scales of severity, occurrence, and detection to the process improvement plan proposed in part B. Note: You are not expected to carry out the full FMEA. D. Explain how you would test the interventions from the process improvement plan from part B to improve care. E. Explain how a professional nurse can competently demonstrate leadership in each of the following areas: • promoting quality care • improving patient outcomes • influencing quality improvement activities 1. Discuss how the involvement of the professional nurse in the RCA and FMEA processes demonstrates leadership qualities. F. Acknowledge sources, using in-text citations and references, for content that is quoted, paraphrased, or summarized. G. Demonstrate professional communication in the content and presentation of your submission. File Restrictions File name may contain only letters, numbers, spaces, and these symbols: ! - _ . * ' ( ) File size limit: 200 MB File types allowed: doc, docx, rtf, xls, xlsx, ppt, pptx, odt, pdf, txt, qt, mov, mpg, avi, mp3, wav, mp4, wma, flv, asf, mpeg, wmv, m4v, svg, tif, tiff, jpeg, jpg, gif, png, zip, rar, tar, 7z RUBRIC A:ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS NOT EVIDENT An explanation of the general purpose of conducting an RCA is not provided. APPROACHING COMPETENCE The explanation does not accurately describe the general purpose for conducting an RCA. COMPETENT The explanation accurately describes the general purpose for conducting an RCA. A1:RCA STEPS NOT EVIDENT An explanation of 6 RCA steps is not provided. APPROACHING COMPETENCE The explanation does not accurately identify or does not logically describe one or more of the 6 steps used to conduct an RCA, as defined by IHI. COMPETENT The explanation accurately identifies and logically describes each of the 6 steps used to conduct an RCA, as defined by IHI. A2:CAUSATIVE AND CONTRIBUTING FACTORS NOT EVIDENT An application of the RCA process to the scenario is not provided. APPROACHING COMPETENCE The application of the RCA process to the scenario does not accurately describe causative or contributing factors that led to the sentinel event outcome, or the application does not accurately differentiate between causative and contributing factors. COMPETENT The application of the RCA process to the scenario accurately describes the causative and contributing factors that led to the sentinel event outcome. B:IMPROVEMENT PLAN NOT EVIDENT A proposed process improvement plan is not provided. APPROACHING COMPETENCE The proposal does not outline a logical process improvement plan, or the proposal does not logically discuss how the proposed plan will decrease the likelihood of a reoccurrence of the scenario outcome. COMPETENT The proposal outlines a logical process improvement plan and logically discusses how the proposed plan will decrease the likelihood of a reoccurrence of the scenario outcome. B1:CHANGE THEORY NOT EVIDENT A discussion of the application of Lewin’s change theory is not provided. APPROACHING COMPETENCE The discussion does not logically describe how Lewin’s change theory could be applied to the proposed improvement plan, or the discussion does not describe each phase of the theory. COMPETENT The discussion logically describes how each phase of Lewin’s change theory could be applied to the proposed improvement plan. C:GENERAL PURPOSE OF FMEA NOT EVIDENT An explanation of the general purpose of the FMEA process is not provided. APPROACHING COMPETENCE The explanation does not accurately describe a general purpose of the FMEA process, or the explanation does not logically discuss why the FMEA process would be used. COMPETENT The explanation accurately describes a general purpose of the FMEA process and logically discusses why the FMEA process would be used. C1:STEPS OF FMEA PROCESS NOT EVIDENT A description of the steps is not provided. APPROACHING COMPETENCE The description of the steps of the FMEA process does not accurately define each of the steps. COMPETENT The description accurately defines each of the steps of the FMEA process. C2:FMEA TABLE NOT EVIDENT A completed FMEA table is not provided. APPROACHING COMPETENCE The FMEA table is incomplete, does not identify appropriate failure modes related to the improvement plan proposed in prompt B, or does not accurately apply the scales of severity, occurrence, and detection in evaluating the identified failure modes. COMPETENT The completed FMEA table appropriately identifies failure modes related to the improvement plan proposed in part B and demonstrates accurate application of the scales of severity, occurrence, and detection in evaluating the identified failure modes. D:INTERVENTION TESTING NOT EVIDENT An explanation of intervention testing is not provided. APPROACHING COMPETENCE The explanation does not describe steps of an appropriate testing procedure or practice that would be used by the candidate to test interventions from the process improvement plan in part B, or the explanation does not logically describe how the intervention testing procedures or practices would improve care. COMPETENT The explanation describes steps of the testing procedures or practices that the candidate would use that are appropriate for testing the interventions from the process improvement plan in part B. The explanation logically describes how the intervention testing procedures or practices would improve care. E:DEMONSTRATE LEADERSHIP NOT EVIDENT An explanation of how a professional nurse demonstrates leadership is not provided. APPROACHING COMPETENCE The explanation does not logically describe how a professional nurse competently demonstrates leadership in one or more of the given areas. COMPETENT The explanation logically describes how a professional nurse competently demonstrates leadership in each of the given areas. E1:INVOLVING PROFESSIONAL NURSE IN RCA AND FMEA PROCESSES NOT EVIDENT A discussion of involvement in the RCA and FMEA processes is not provided. APPROACHING COMPETENCE The discussion does not logically describe how the involvement of the professional nurse in either the RCA process or the FMEA process demonstrates leadership qualities. COMPETENT The discussion logically describes how the involvement of the professional nurse in both the RCA and FMEA processes demonstrates leadership qualities. F:SOURCES NOT EVIDENT The submission does not include both in-text citations and a reference list for sources that are quoted, paraphrased, or summarized. APPROACHING COMPETENCE The submission includes in-text citations for sources that are quoted, paraphrased, or summarized and a reference list; however, the citations or reference list is incomplete or inaccurate. COMPETENT The submission includes in-text citations for sources that are properly quoted, paraphrased, or summarized and a reference list that accurately identifies the author, date, title, and source location as available. G:PROFESSIONAL COMMUNICATION NOT EVIDENT Content is unstructured, is disjointed, or contains pervasive errors in mechanics, usage, or grammar. Vocabulary or tone is unprofessional or distracts from the topic. APPROACHING COMPETENCE Content is poorly organized, is difficult to follow, or contains errors in mechanics, usage, or grammar that cause confusion. Terminology is misused or ineffective. COMPETENT Content reflects attention to detail, is organized, and focuses on the main ideas as prescribed in the task or chosen by the candidate. Terminology is pertinent, is used correctly, and effectively conveys the intended meaning. Mechanics, usage, and grammar promote accurate interpretation and understanding. source..
Content:
Application of RCA & FMEA in the Healthcare Industry Name Course Institution Instructor Date Application of RCA & FMEA in the Healthcare Industry Question A 1 Six steps comprise a root cause analysis. Consider it as the where, when, what, and why logic. When performing an RCA, it is important to consider all perspectives on the current situation. The very first step in conducting an RCA is to ask or identify, "What happened?" The RCA team will make every effort to explain the situation thoroughly and precisely. What ought to have happened instead is the next step. This should be simple in the medical field because we have procedures and policies for almost every situation. The third stage is to figure out what caused the event. What caused the occurrence? Charts and diagrams can be employed to organize the presentation of all potential factors (Latino & Flood, 2004). Fourth , the cohort undertaking the analysis will put together what is known as causal statements. A causal statement is an overview of the events that took place, what caused them, and the outcome. The fifth step is to develop recommended actions to avoid repeating the same mistake in the future. Finally, the team compiles all of the information, suggestions, and plans they have gathered into a summary to share with everyone involved in the organization. Question A 2 According to the narrative, several things must have occurred in this situation but did not. First, the nurse must have queried the medication dosages of the pain and sedation medications prescribed. The effects of the oxycodone he generally takes for pain were going to be less efficacious for Mr. B, but the doctor and nurse did not give him enough time for the meds to impact his system and become efficient before giving him more. Both nurses and doctors must be properly trained in sedating a patient for an operation like Mr. B's hip reduction, including proper dosing and drug requirements. The nurse should have started the patient on ECG real-time monitoring, constant pulse oximetry, and blood pressure monitoring (automated). Because Nurse J did not provide Mr. B with continuous oxygen and heart monitoring, the blood pressure and oxygen levels were dangerously low at the moment the son feverishly came out, just after the LPN had overlooked the alarm and not alerted Nurse J. Because of the settings; the LPN should really have immediately informed Nurse J of the oxygen because it would be a further 5 minutes prior checking again. While all of this was going on, there was information provided that another staff was accessible for backup, which might have been called upon by the assistant who was working the shift. The next step in the RCA process is to determine the causative factors of the event. Mr. B died as a result of an absence of oxygen to his brain and excessively low blood pressure, which caused him to enter cardiac arrest. Other minor causes that contribute to the ultimate outcome include the doctor over sedating the patient and the nurse’s administering medication without questioning the appropriate dosage. If Dr. T had received the necessary medication and sedation training, he would have recognized that the dosing was excessive, as well as all of the necessary post-procedure monitoring, including continuous oxygen and heart monitoring. This is also the fault of Nurse J for failing to set up proper tracking, as well as the LPN for "answering" the alarm and disregarding what it was calling for. The fourth phase in the RCA procedure is to create casual statements, which starts the very straightforward retracing of the procedure and the entire RCA overview starts to unfold. Question B 1. Propose a process improvement plan that would decrease the likelihood of a reoccurrence of the scenario outcome. The first and most important step I would recommend is that employees obtain and attend all necessary job-related training. Respiratory therapists, LPNs, Nurses, and Doctors are all included. The training will cover what is expected of each division during the process, in addition to the care standards. Conscious sedation training must include who must be present at the bedside during and before the procedure, along with the standards of care, including prescription drug doses and post-procedure tracking. Then, in the divisions where the process is performed, all staff must attend training and pass a post-test to demonstrate competency and understanding. Question B2 Discuss how each phase of Lewin’s change theory on the human side of change could be applied to the proposed improvement plan Lewin's change theory is a 3-stage change model known as the unfreezing-change refreeze model, which calls for previous knowledge to be turned down and replaced. The unfreezing stage is the first step, which implies attempting to persuade individuals to stop being "stuck in their ways." This necessitates a rationale for the required change (Shirey, 2013). The following stage is the transformation. After a debriefing and the possibility of examining and see the aforementioned challenges, the staff is more likely to be open to change as they understand the benefits. The training will be tailored to reflect the changes, and the changes will need to be closely monitored to make certain that the goal is met. Now that all the staff is trained in the new technique will cement it as the "new normal" approach to things, and they will eventually refreeze into it. Question C. Explain the general purpose of the failure mode and effects analysis (FMEA) process. 1. Describe the steps of the FMEA process as defined by IHI. FMEA is essential for facilitating a proactive, systematic analysis of a potentially harmful process. This is employed to prevent failures from occurring in the first place, with the goal of reducing the possibility of injury to both staff and patients. It is especially useful in assessing the impact of a proposed change initiative before integrating it, making it simpler to determine whether the advantages outweigh the risks. The very first phase is to determine which process you want to evaluate. We are assessing whether all caregivers engaged should receive updated mandatory sedation training. The second step is to assemble the team that will receive and provides training, as well as who will benefit from it. This includes a pharmacy for the distribution and verification of sedating treatments during the procedure. Third, we enumerate every step that is required in this training program to enhance the conscious sedation outcome. The next action is to reconsider the situation and take a look at it from a different angle. What could potentially go wrong with the group's new system, how might it possibly go wrong, how severe would it be, and how highly probable is it to go wrong? Finally, when utilizing RPNs, the failure modes with the high...
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