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Greater New York
Hospital Association
WORKING TOGETHER TO CREATE
AND SUSTAIN CHANGE
NYS Partnership for Patients Final Report
Prepared by the Healthcare Association of New York State
and Greater New York Hospital Association
2012–2014
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Presidents’ Message............................................................................................................................
Overview...............................................................................................................................................
Culture and Leadership.......................................................................................................................
Adverse Drug Events in High-Risk Medications................................................................................
Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections....................................................................................
Central Line–Associated Bloodstream Infections..............................................................................
Early Elective Deliveries......................................................................................................................
Falls.......................................................................................................................................................
Pressure Ulcers.....................................................................................................................................
Surgical Site Infections........................................................................................................................
Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia and Ventilator-Associated Events..............................................
Venous Thromboembolism.................................................................................................................
Readmissions........................................................................................................................................
Rural and Critical Access Hospitals....................................................................................................
NYSPFP-Participating Hospitals.........................................................................................................
Message from the Co-Directors.........................................................................................................
Endnotes..............................................................................................................................................
1
3
5
6
8
10
11
12
13
14
16
17
18
19
21
23
24
Dear Colleagues,
We are proud to celebrate New York State Partnership for Patient’s (NYSPFP) 169 participating hospitals for your many accomplishments over the past three years toward achieving the national goals of
reducing hospital-acquired conditions by 40% and preventable readmissions by 20%.
Thanks to your important work, patients are safer and outcomes are better across New York State.
Hospitals statewide are advancing the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ (CMS) triple aim of
improved health and better care at a lower cost.
As a joint initiative of the Healthcare Association of New York State (HANYS) and Greater New York
Hospital Association (GNYHA), NYSPFP has been a true partnership based on our hospitals’ shared
mission to advance quality improvement and patient safety. In service to our hospitals, we assumed the
responsibility in 2011 when selected by CMS to lead this national patient safety program in New York
State.
We entered into this collaboration to help New York hospitals improve care delivery and position their
organizations for continued success in this era of extraordinary change and transformation. Recognizing that quality is at the center of reform, and financial well-being is increasingly tied to improved outcomes, we aligned our initiatives with Federal and State quality-based reimbursement programs, where
possible. We hope that NYSPFP has helped New York hospitals meet the demands—and prepare for
the uncertainties—of this ever-changing health care landscape.
Your significant progress in reducing preventable readmissions and harm across 10 clinical areas is a testament to your extraordinary effort and commitment to improve patient safety. The work of New York
State hospitals is so impressive that a May 2014 report by the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services pointed to NYSPFP’s dramatic improvements in quality and patient safety. CMS affirmed our
collective progress by extending NYSPFP’s program for an additional year through 2014.
On behalf of patients across New York State, thank you for the work you do every day toward achieving
the best outcomes. Through NYSPFP, it has been our privilege to partner with hospitals on this shared
journey of change and progress. We are confident that our hospitals will continue to build on this momentum and we wish you every success in the years ahead.
The future of health care in New York State is in the best of hands—yours.
Dennis P. Whalen
Kenneth E. Raske
President
President
Healthcare Association of New York State
Greater New York Hospital Association
OVERVIEW
From 2012 through 2014, NYSPFP hospitals made tremendous progress in enhancing patient safety
and quality of care across the state by achieving significant improvements in almost every PFP focus
area.
The data in this report represent NYSPFP hospitals’ collective efforts and illustrate that fewer patients
in New York State are at risk of becoming injured or developing an unexpected medical condition or
complication while in the hospital. And once discharged, fewer patients are readmitted. Participating
hospitals’ accomplishments in the following areas are especially noteworthy:
•
•
•
Reduced Early Elective Deliveries: 1,832 fewer babies were delivered before full term when not
medically necessary, giving them a healthier start on life and reducing risk for mothers.
Reduced Readmissions: 25,351 readmissions were avoided within 30 days of discharge.
Reduced Central Line–Associated Bloodstream Infections: 1,279 fewer infections resulted from
the use of central intravenous lines that provide patients with fluids and medications and withdraw
blood.
NYSPFP Progress-at-a-Glance: The graph on the following page illustrates the change in performance
for each outcome measure from the baseline to data available as of November 2014.
E
VAT
O
N
EN
GE
GA
IN
NYSPFP worked with participating hospitals to increase their capacity for crosscutting improvement
by further developing an infrastructure that would be sustainable beyond the program. NYSPFP’s approach has been embedded in a set of four Guiding Principles designed to foster and operationalize
a culture of safety and continuous quality improvement: innovate, engage, integrate, and hardwire
improvements in care.
DW
IR
E
AT
E
HAR
CULTURE
OF
SAFETY
INTE
GR
3
NYSPFP 40/20 GOAL IMPROVEMENT FROM BASELINE
CAUTI Population Rate
28.36%
CLABSI SIR
40.51%
SSI COLO SIR (2010 Baseline)
-31.17%
SSI COLO SIR (2013 Baseline)
5.15%
SSI HPRO SIR
15.58%
SSI CABG SIR
19.76%
VAP Rate (2012)
20.33%
IVAC+ Rate
9.51%
ADE Rate
49.64%
19.29%*
Pressure Ulcers, Stage 2 >
29.74%
Falls with Moderate > Injury
16.01%*
Falls with Any Injury
-8.06%
VTE Rate
16.39%
PPR Rate
11.04%
All Cause Readmission Rate
89.58%*
OB-EED
-40%
-20%
0%
20%
40%
80%
Rate worsened
Rate improved but < 40/20 goal
Rate met preventable goal**
Observed rate met 40/20 goal
(*) Also at CMS benchmark
(**) Preventable goal is CMS’ calculation for the reduction in preventable events
The results in this report are considered interim and subject to final verification by CMS.
4
60%
100%
CULTURE AND LEADERSHIP
Recognizing that hospitals had made improvements and were committed to continued progress through
the Partnership, NYSPFP focused on the need to develop a safety culture and build capacity to sustain
that progress.
APPROACH AND INNOVATIONS
To achieve those goals, NYSPFP provided support in a number of key areas, including Culture of Safety,
Data Management, Patient and Family Engagement, and Building Capacity.
For Culture of Safety: NYSPFP facilitated the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)
Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture annually and provided hospital-specific workbooks, comparative reports, and education for analysis and strategic planning. NYSPFP also educated more than 1,200
hospital staff on improving communications and teamwork skills using the TeamSTEPPSTM program.
For Data Management: To help hospitals track their progress in the 10 clinical focus areas, NYSPFP
developed a robust data management and analysis system that included a web-based comparative
dashboard and initiative-level data. In addition, NYSPFP periodically provided hospitals with a variety
of hospital-specific reports that focused on clinical areas, readmissions, and on hospitals’ high- and lowperformance areas.
For Patient and Family Engagement (PFE): NYSPFP developed the Patient and Family Engagement
Resource Guide and provided educational sessions and conferences to help hospitals engage patients
and families, further incorporate their voices into hospital operations, and enhance patient-centered
care.
For Building Capacity: NYSPFP addressed CMS’ goal of achieving no harm across the board by assisting hospitals with building capacity for rapid change. The tactics included integrating hospital-acquired
conditions (HACs) prevention activities; incorporating safety practices across the care delivery system;
encouraging the involvement of physicians and front-line staff; and offering materials and conferences
that focused on organizational best practices.
5
ADVERSE DRUG EVENTS IN HIGH-RISK MEDICATIONS
Adverse drug events (ADEs) are injuries caused by medication use. Hospitalized patients are harmed by an
estimated 380,000 to 450,000 preventable ADEs each year, nationwide. ADEs can nearly double a patient’s
risk of dying.1 The more serious adverse events are caused by a relatively small number of medications,
known as high-risk medications, including anticoagulants, insulin, and opioids. These medications, because
they are used so often with so many patients, coupled with their inherent risks, are responsible for the majority of ADE harm.2
APPROACH AND INNOVATIONS
As an emerging area of patient safety, NYSPFP’s ADE initiative brought new thinking and experiences to
hospitals. It also brought new challenges for measuring and comparing performance, because there are no
widely accepted evidence-based ADE metrics, and ADE data collection varied by hospital. Recognizing the
need to provide hospitals with comparable data while aligning with CMS’ 2014 strategies, NYSPFP utilized
four new measures for improved comparisons and launched them in an ADE pilot.
Hospitals collected data on blood glucose, international normalized ratio (INR), and the use of reversal drugs
for opioids. One important finding was the value of involving the pharmacist in the quality improvement
process, especially for medication reconciliation at admission and discharge.
RESULTS AND OUTCOMES
Overall, hospitals’ efforts reduced the statewide ADE rate by 49.64%.
2.0
1.8
1.6
1.4
1.2
1.0
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
Ju
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A
pr
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3
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b1
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-1
4
ADE Rate Per 1,000 Patient Days
ADVERSE DRUG EVENT RATE FOR HIGH-ALERT DRUGS
Year and Month
6
The ADE rate
decreased by
49.64%, meaning
1,811 ADEs were
prevented.
Hospitals now have data in four new metrics to use for comparative analysis.
RATE OF UNIQUE INPATIENTS WITH AN INR GREATER THAN 5 PER
100 UNIQUE INPATIENTS PRESCRIBED WARFARIN THERAPY
RATE OF EPISODES A REVERSAL AGENT IS ADMINISTERED PER
100 INPATIENTS PRESCRIBED OPIOIDS
RATE OF UNIQUE INPATIENTS WHO HAVE AT LEAST ONE BLOOD
GLUCOSE RESULT THAT IS LESS THAN OR EQUAL TO 50 MG/DL PER
100 UNIQUE INPATIENTS PRESCRIBED INSULIN
RATE OF UNIQUE INPATIENTS WHO HAVE AT LEAST ONE BLOOD
GLUCOSE RESULT THAT IS GREATER THAN OR EQUAL TO 200 MG/
DL PER 100 UNIQUE INPATIENTS PRESCRIBED INSULIN
7
CATHETER-ASSOCIATED URINARY TRACT INFECTIONS (CAUTIs)
Urinary catheters are often essential to patient care; however, the longer a catheter is left in place, the greater the potential for infection. CAUTIs account for 35% of hospital-acquired infections3 and not only expose
a patient to the risks associated with infection, but also cause discomfort, pain, and a longer hospital stay.
APPROACH AND INNOVATIONS
NYSPFP identified a rising trend in CAUTI and prioritized it as one of the first initiatives. NYSPFP provided
hospitals with education and resources to implement evidence-based practices for catheter insertion and
maintenance, and shared advanced interventions.
NYSPFP engaged a national expert, Sanjay Saint, M.D., as an advisor. Dr. Saint provided additional programming and resources, including a CAUTI “GPS” tool to improve understanding of the barriers to reducing
catheter use, and a two-tier approach for units with increasing rates. He also led a series of regional conferences and “Office Hours” webinars that delved into many clinical and socio-adaptive issues of catheter use.
Hospitals piloted a series of advanced practices, such as ensuring the medical necessity of catheter insertions in the emergency department and using nurse-driven protocols, including daily review of the catheter
and hard or soft discontinuation of catheters.
RESULTS AND OUTCOMES
NYSPFP hospitals have made measurable progress in reducing CAUTIs, and have significantly reduced urinary catheter use:
• 28.36% decrease in the CAUTI population rate, a measure that takes into account a decreasing catheter utilization ratio
• 21.28% reduction in catheter use
8
Jan-12
Jun-14
Jul-14
May-14
Apr-14
Feb-14
Mar-14
Jan-14
Dec-13
Oct-13
Nov-13
Sep-13
Aug-13
Jun-13
Jul-13
May-13
Apr-13
Mar-13
Feb-13
Jan-13
Dec-12
Nov-12
Oct-12
Sep-12
Aug-12
Jun-12
Jul-12
May-12
Apr-12
Feb-12
Mar-12
Urinary Catheter Utilization Ratio
Ja
n
Fe -12
bM 12
ar
Ap -12
r
M -12
ay
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nJu 12
Au l-12
g
Se -12
pO 12
ct
N -12
ov
D -12
ec
Ja 12
n
Fe -13
b
M -13
ar
Ap -13
r
M -13
ay
Ju -13
nJu 13
Au l-13
g
Se -13
pO 13
ct
N -13
ov
D -13
ec
Ja -13
n
Fe -14
bM 14
ar
Ap -14
r
M -14
ay
Ju -14
nJu 14
l-1
4
CAUTI Population Rate Per 10,000 Patient Days
CAUTI POPULATION RATE PER 10,000 PATIENT DAYS
10
9
8
7
6
5
3
4
2
1
0
Year and Month
URINARY CATHETER UTILIZATION RATIO
0.35
0.30
0.25
0.20
0.15
0.10
0.05
0
Year and Month
9
CENTRAL LINE–ASSOCIATED BLOODSTREAM INFECTIONS (CLABSIs)
A central intravenous line is used to provide fluids and medications, withdraw blood, and monitor the patient’s condition. While central lines are an integral part of patient care, their use can result in bacterial infections that enter the bloodstream. An estimated 30,100 CLABSIs occur in U.S. hospitals every year,4 which
puts patients at risk and can add up to three weeks to a hospital stay.
Through NYSPFP, hospitals accelerated their ongoing efforts to reduce CLABSI and achieved CMS’ 40%
reduction goal.
APPROACH AND INNOVATIONS
NYSPFP focused CLABSI reduction efforts on using insertion and maintenance bundles, increasing review
of the line’s necessity, and extending those efforts beyond the intensive care unit to patient floors and units
hospital-wide.
As part of these efforts, NYSPFP worked with hospitals to develop protocols related to the principle of “No
Line—No Infection,” discouraging unnecessary line insertion and promoting prompt removal of lines as
soon as medically indicated. The “Scrub the Hub” principle encouraged staff to maintain the lines’ integrity
and keep them germ-free, especially during long-term use. NYSPFP also developed a customized tracking
tool for nurses to evaluate the necessity of a central line.
RESULTS AND OUTCOMES
NYSPFP-participating hospitals exceeded the CMS goal of 40% with a reduction of 40.51%, and prevented
1,279 bloodstream infections.
CLABSI Standardized Infection Ratio
CLABSI STANDARIZED INFECTION RATIO
1.2
1.0
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
Year and Month
10
Jul-14
May-14
Jan-14
Mar-14
Nov-13
Jul-13
Sep-13
May-13
Jan-13
Mar-13
Nov-12
Jul-12
Sep-12
May-12
Jan-12
Mar-12
Nov-11
Jul-11
Sep-11
May-11
Jan-11
Mar-11
Nov-10
Jul-10
Sep-10
May-10
Jan-10
Mar-10
0
EARLY ELECTIVE DELIVERIES (EEDs)
Delivering a baby by cesarean section or inducing labor before 39 weeks (unless medically necessary)
increases the risk of injury for newborn and mother, prolongs hospital stays, and increases health care
costs. NYSPFP partnered with the New York State Department of Health (DOH) in 2012 to reduce the
statewide EED rate to 5% or lower.
APPROACH AND INNOVATIONS
DOH’s New York State Perinatal Quality Collaborative and NYSPFP supported the success of more than
100 hospitals that implemented “hard” stop protocols to prevent the scheduling of deliveries prior to
39 weeks gestation that were not medically necessary. This strategy, in conjunction with promoting
a standardized practice for calculating gestational age, had a tremendous impact on the results. In
addition, providers, staff, and most importantly, expectant parents, received educational materials on
gestational age and early delivery.
RESULTS AND OUTCOMES
NYSPFP hospitals reduced EEDs by 89.58% to achieve the CMS benchmark of < 2%.
30%
Participating
hospitals reduced
EEDs by 89.58%,
which means
1,832 fewer early
deliveries.
25%
20%
15%
10%
5%
Ju
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12
l-1
A 2
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Se 2
p1
O 2
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-1
N 2
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-1
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-1
Ja 2
n1
Fe 3
b1
M 3
ar
-1
A 3
pr
M 13
ay
-1
Ju 3
n13
Ju
l-1
A 3
ug
Se 13
p1
O 3
ct
-1
N 3
ov
D 13
ec
-1
Ja 3
n1
Fe 4
b1
M 4
ar
-1
A 4
pr
M 14
ay
-1
Ju 4
n14
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l-1
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ug
-1
Se 4
p14
0%
Ju
Rate of Scheduled Deliveries <39 Weeks
PERCENT OF ALL SCHEDULED DELIVERIES AT 36 0/7 TO 38 6/7 WEEKS
GESTATION WITHOUT DOCUMENTATION OF LISTED
MATERNAL OR FETAL REASON
Year and Month
11
FALLS
Hospital patients are susceptible to falls for a number of reasons, including being weak, light-headed, or
unsteady from their illness, surgery, medications, or other treatments. Patient falls are among the most frequently reported adverse events in hospitals5 and sometimes result in serious hip and spine fractures, and
head injury. Falls can often lead to increased length of stay and readmission.
APPROACH AND INNOVATIONS
Hospitals in New York have been working on fall prevention with success for many years. Given NYSPFP’s
“no harm across the board” theme, fall efforts focused on preventing falls that result in moderate or greater patient harm by integrating risk assessment, safety practices, and safety equipment into nursing care
delivery. A national expert, Patricia Quigley R.N., Ph.D., led fall injury prevention workshops and provided
advanced insight into how to prevent different types of falls.
RESULTS AND OUTCOMES
NYSPFP hospitals achieved a 29.74% reduction in falls with moderate or greater harm, and reduced falls
with any harm by 16.01%, resulting in a rate below the CMS benchmark of 0.5.
RATE OF FALLS WITH MODERATE OR GREATER HARM
PER 1,000 PATIENT DAYS
0.14
0.12
Rate
0.10
0.08
0.06
0.04
0.02
4
4
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Se
4
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4
-1
-1
ay
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3
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n14
ov
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3
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p13
Se
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3
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3
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ay
M
M
12
n13
Ja
12
p-
ov
-
N
Se
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n12
M
ar
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2
M
ay
-1
2
Ju
l-1
2
0
Year and Month
RATE OF FALLS WITH ANY HARM PER 1,000 PATIENT DAYS
0.6
Rate
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
Year and Month
12
Aug-14
Sep-14
Apr-14
May-14
Jun-14
Jul-14
Feb-14
Mar-14
Dec-13
Jan-14
Oct-13
Nov-13
Jun-13
Jul-13
Aug-13
Sep-13
Apr-13
May-13
Feb-13
Mar-13
Dec-12
Jan-13
Oct-12
Nov-12
Jun-12
Jul-12
Aug-12
Sep-12
Apr-12
May-12
Jan-12
Feb-12
Mar-12
0
PRESSURE ULCERS
Pressure ulcers impact more than 2.5 million6 hospital patients each year and can cause infections and
other serious complications, requiring additional treatment and a longer hospital stay.
When NYSPFP began, hospitals’ pressure ulcer rates were already better than CMS’ benchmark. Participating hospitals improved even more by adopting new strategies and implementing and hardwiring
practices learned from NYSPFP’s pressure ulcer initiative into their day-to-day patient care.
APPROACH AND INNOVATIONS
NYSPFP advanced the use of evidence-based practices from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement
and the NYS Gold STAMP (Success Through Assessment, Management, and Prevention) Program. Hospitals focused on daily screening and assessment of all patients for pressure ulcer risk, with extra vigilance for those at high risk for developing pressure ulcers. In addition, NYSPFP provided education
in areas such as: moisture-related pressure ulcer development, managing incontinence, the impact of
nutrition on preventing pressure ulcers, and strategies for bed-bound patients in the emergency and
operating rooms.
RESULTS AND OUTCOMES
After starting the program with a rate lower than CMS’ benchmark, NYSPFP hospitals further reduced
the pressure ulcer rate for Stage II and greater by 19.29%.
Pressure Ulcer Rate Per 100 Patients
FACILITY-ACQUIRED PRESSURE ULCER RATE
Starting below the CMS benchmark,
NYSPFP-participating hospitals
further reduced the pressure ulcer
rate by 19.29% for Stage II and
greater; 822 pressure ulcers were
prevented.
4.0
3.5
3.0
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0
Q1
2012
Q2
2012
Q3
2012
Q4
2012
Q1
2013
Q2
2013
Q3
2013
Q4
2013
Q1
2014
Q2
2014
Q3
2014
Year and Quarter
13
SURGICAL SITE INFECTIONS (SSIs)
Surgical site infections occur in 2% to 5% of surgical inpatients, and as many as 60% of SSIs are considered
preventable.7 Patients who develop an SSI usually need to stay an additional week or more in the hospital,
sometimes in intensive care,8 and are more likely to be readmitted with complications.
APPROACH AND INNOVATIONS
NYSPFP focused on SSI prevention for four procedures—hip (HPRO), colon (COLO), coronary artery bypass
graft (CABG), and abdominal hysterectomy (HYST). Kick-off in-person conferences drew more than 600 participants, followed by a year-long curriculum of best practices for each phase of surgical care: pre-admission,
pre-procedure, operating room, post-hospital anesthesia unit, and discharge.
Changes in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s SSI colon surveillance system in 2013, along
with national comparisons, prompted NYSPFP to aggressively address New York State’s higher SSI colon
rate. Nationally renowned surgeons Patcheon Dellinger, M.D., and Robert Cima, M.D., advised NYSPFP
and were faculty for in-person conferences and advanced topic tutorials. NYSPFP also disseminated an Advanced SSI Colon Bundle that addressed leading research and evidence, and provided tools and resources
applicable for other surgical procedures.
RESULTS AND OUTCOMES
NYSPFP hospitals’ SSI performance was mixed. SSI SIRs (Standardized Infection Ratios) decreased 15.58%
for hip surgery and 19.76% for CABG. Although abdominal hysterectomy had also trended downward since
2010, it increased 3.14% in the final three months of the program. While hospitals saw a 31% increase in
SSI colon from 2010—reflecting a national trend—early data show progress with a 5.15% reduction since
NYSPFP introduced the Advanced SSI Colon Bundle in the spring of 2014.
14
0
Jan-10
Year and Month
0
Oct-12
Jan-13
Feb-13
1.6
1.2
1.4
1.0
0.8
0.6
0.2
0.4
Jan-13
Jan-14
Nov-13
Sep-13
Jul-13
May-13
Mar-13
Jul-14
Jul-14
Mar-14
1.8
May-14
HYST SSI STANDARDIZED INFECTION RATIO
Jun-14
Year and Month
May-14
Apr-14
Mar-14
Feb-14
Jan-14
Dec-13
Nov-13
Oct-13
Sep-13
Nov-12
Sep-12
Jul-12
May-12
Mar-12
Jan-12
Nov-11
Sep-11
Jul-11
May-11
Mar-11
Jan-11
Nov-10
0.4
Aug-13
Jul-10
Sep-10
0.2
Jul-13
Jun-13
May-13
Apr-13
Year and Month
Mar-13
0.2
Dec-12
0.4
Nov-12
0.6
Sep-12
1.2
Jul-12
HPRO SSI STANDARDIZED INFECTION RATIO
Aug-12
0.8
0
Jun-12
0.2
May-10
0.4
Apr-12
0.6
Mar-12
0.8
Jan-10
1.0
Mar-10
1.2
COLO SSI Standardized Infection Ratio
1.4
May-12
Jul-14
May-14
Mar-14
Jan-14
Nov-13
Sep-13
Jul-13
May-13
Mar-13
Jan-13
Nov-12
Sep-12
Jul-12
May-12
Mar-12
Jan-12
Nov-11
Sep-11
Jul-11
May-11
Mar-11
Jan-11
Nov-10
1.6
Feb-12
1.0
HYST SSI Standardized Infection Ratio
Jul-10
Sep-10
CABG SSI Standardized Infection Ratio
1.8
Jan-12
Jul-14
May-14
Mar-14
Jan-14
Nov-13
Sep-13
Jul-13
May-13
Mar-13
Jan-13
Nov-12
Sep-12
Jul-12
May-12
Mar-12
Jan-12
Nov-11
Sep-11
Jul-11
May-11
Mar-11
Jan-11
Nov-10
Sep-10
Jul-10
May-10
May-10
Mar-10
Jan-10
0
Mar-10
HPRO SSI Standardized Infection Ratio
CABG SSI STANDARDIZED INFECTION RATIO
COLO SSI STANDARDIZED INFECTION RATIO
1.6
1.4
1.2
0.8
1.0
0.6
New Criteria
Year and Month
15
VENTILATOR-ASSOCIATED PNEUMONIA (VAP) AND VENTILATORASSOCIATED EVENTS (VAEs)
Ventilators are life-saving devices for critically ill patients, but they can also lead to life-threatening infections
like pneumonia and sepsis, and other complications. Studies estimate that ventilators are used for more than
300,000 patients each year in the United States.9 VAP is one of the leading causes of death among hospital-acquired infections, with a mortality rate as high as 40%.10 In 2012, hospitals across the country reported
more than 3,900 VAP cases to the National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN).11
APPROACH AND INNOVATIONS
NYSPFP started its program work with the Institute for Healthcare Improvement VAP prevention bundle
of evidence-based practices and added advanced VAP and VAE prevention strategies. Those strategies
focused on developing and implementing oral care, early activity and mobility protocols, and reducing or
eliminating sedation. Additional education was provided on other HACs, such as strategies for preventing
delirium and the appropriate use of narcotics and sedatives. NYSPFP also provided education on the new
NSHN VAE surveillance criteria.
RESULTS AND OUTCOMES
NYSPFP-participating hospitals saw dramatic success in the first year of the initiative, with a 20% VAP decrease in 2012. The new VAE measure and initiative showed positive trends and improvements in all areas.
The new Infection-Related Ventilator-Associated Complication (IVAC) rate decreased by 8.89% since its
inception in 2013.
INFECTION-RELATED VENTILATOR-ASSOCIATED COMPLICATION RATE
1.0
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
n13
Fe
b13
M
ar
-1
3
Ap
r-1
M 3
ay
-1
3
Ju
n13
Ju
l-1
3
Au
g13
Se
p13
O
ct
-1
3
N
ov
-1
3
D
ec
-1
3
Ja
n14
Fe
b14
M
ar
-1
4
Ap
r-1
4
M
ay
-1
4
Ju
n14
Ju
l-1
4
0
Ja
IVAC Rate Per 1,000 Ventilator Days
1.2
Year and Month
16
VENOUS THROMBOEMBOLISM (VTE)
VTE encompasses two conditions, deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. VTE is not uncommon among hospitalized patients, but it is estimated that at least 50% of VTEs may be preventable.12
APPROACH AND INNOVATIONS
NYSPFP provided a VTE learning network for hospitals across the state in 2012 via regional conferences,
followed up by webinars to address VTE prevention, medication management, and CMS’ new VTE core
measures for 2013. VTE rates in the State remained steady and low. In 2014, NYSPFP refocused resources on VTE after determining that the rate was increasing slightly and New York State showed one of the
higher rates nationally. The interventions included: assessing risk; implementing pharmaceutical and
mechanical prevention techniques; transition and titration of medications; and integrating that work
with the hospital’s ADE (anticoagulants) teams. In addition, pharmacy-driven teams were encouraged
to provide medication reconciliation and patient education on high-alert drugs at discharge. As part of
this initiative, hospitals also had access to one-on-one consultations with a national VTE expert at IPRO.
RESULTS AND OUTCOMES
NYSPFP hospitals’ VTE rates have been relatively flat and within normal variation range since 2010. The
impact of the summer and fall 2014 interventions will be assessed when the final data is available.
VENOUS THROMBOEMBOLISM RATE
0.30
0.25
0.20
0.15
0.10
Jul-14
May-14
Jan-14
Mar-14
Nov-13
Jul-13
Sep-13
May-13
Jan-13
Mar-13
Sep-12
Nov-12
Jul-12
May-12
Jan-12
Mar-12
Nov-11
Jul-11
Sep-11
May-11
Jan-11
Mar-11
Nov-10
Jul-10
Sep-10
May-10
0.00
Jan-10
0.05
Mar-10
VTE Rate per 100 Patients
0.35
Year and Month
17
READMISSIONS
Hospital readmissions are both common and costly. Approximately 18.4% of hospitalized Medicare patients
are readmitted unexpectedly within 30 days of being discharged.13 Readmissions take a personal toll on the
patient and family and impact hospital resources. The issue is complex and challenging, as there are many
reasons why a patient may wind up back in the hospital.
APPROACH AND INNOVATIONS
Since 2012, NYSPFP’s readmission prevention work has closely examined activities related to admission,
hospital stay, medication reconciliation, and discharge. NYSPFP provided hospitals with tools and resources,
including hospital-specific quarterly reports, to help identify the greatest opportunities for improvement.
NYSPFP and participating hospitals worked with palliative care and community-based care transitions programs, nursing homes, home care, and behavioral health to extend their approach across the continuum of
care.
In 2014, NYSPFP launched a rapid-cycle pilot project for hospitals to test new care processes and communication strategies on targeted units. As part of the program, hospitals had access to top experts from leading
readmissions reduction initiatives, such as BOOST and Project Red. NYSPFP also developed and released
the NYSPFP Preventable Readmissions Action Planning Guide and disseminated tools to help hospitals
conduct readmission chart abstraction, patient and family interviews, and community provider outreach to
better understand the causes of readmissions.
RESULTS AND OUTCOMES
Participating hospitals have achieved significant decreases in readmission rates, including a 16.39% reduction in potentially preventable readmission rates, and an 11.04% reduction in all-cause patient readmissions
within 30 days of discharge.
ALL-CAUSE READMISSION RATE
Rate
0.145
0.140
UCL
13.83%
0.135
CL
13.33%
0.130
LCL
12.82%
0.125
0.120
0.115
Ja
nM 201
ar 0
M -20
ay 10
-2
Ju 01
l- 0
Se 201
p- 0
N 201
ov 0
-2
Ja 01
n- 0
M 201
ar 1
M -20
ay 11
-2
Ju 01
l-2 1
Se 01
p- 1
N 201
ov 1
-2
Ja 01
n- 1
M 201
ar 2
M -20
ay 12
-2
Ju 01
l-2 2
Se 01
p- 2
N 201
ov 2
Ja 201
n- 2
M 201
ar 3
M -20
ay 13
-2
Ju 01
l-2 3
Se 01
p- 3
N 201
ov 3
-2
Ja 013
nM 201
ar 4
M -20
ay 14
-2
01
4
0.110
Year and Month
18
RURAL AND CRITICAL ACCESS HOSPITALS
Small rural and Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs) are often at the heart of their communities as the major
source for the delivery of health care services. To advance their quality improvement efforts and provide rural hospitals with a forum to address safety from their unique delivery systems, NYSPFP teamed
up with the statewide CAH Quality Committee to form a rural/CAH Pod. In all, 23 hospitals joined the
group.
APPROACH AND INNOVATIONS
Due to their lower volume of cases, the rural hospitals focused on a strategy that combined their data to
achieve the 20/40 goal through a “no harm across the board” approach. Hospitals developed a unique
“change package” by starting with NYSPFP program elements and adding components and resources
relevant to their needs. Some of their tailored programming included working with the MATCH tool,
community linkages to reduce readmissions, and additional work on culture and patient engagement.
In addition to their rural/CAH Pod work, many hospitals also participated in NYSPFP’s readmission,
CAUTI, and ADE pilots.
NYSPFP developed a separate data reporting infrastructure and provided monthly individualized and
Pod reports to each hospital which included low-volume metrics such as average days since the last
event for all initiatives.
By scheduling quarterly in-person meetings and monthly calls, the hospitals benefited from the synergy
of shared learning and teaching. The rural/CAH Pod also led NYSPFP’s patient and family engagement
efforts by working with a national expert to build the initial syllabus for NYSPFP’s statewide education
and PFE resource guide.
RESULTS
The Pod’s successful shared learning and improvement approach resulted in reducing harm across the
board (all PFP initiatives excluding readmissions) by 50% when comparing January to June 2012 with
January to June 2014.
19
NO HARM ACROSS THE BOARD
RURAL/CAH POD
25
20
15
10
5
0
J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A
2012
20
2013
2014
NYSPFP-PARTICIPATING HOSPITALS
NYSPFP thanks the following hospitals for their extensive work to meet CMS’ PfP goals:
Adirondack Medical Center
Albany Memorial Hospital
Alice Hyde Medical Center
Auburn Memorial Hospital
Aurelia Osborn Fox Memorial Hospital
Bassett Medical Center
Bellevue Hospital Center
Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center—Concourse Division
Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center—Fulton Division
Brookdale University Hospital and Medical Center
Brookhaven Memorial Hospital Medical Center
The Brooklyn Hospital Center
Brooks Memorial Hospital
Buffalo General Hospital
Burdett Care Center
Burke Rehabilitation Hospital
Canton-Potsdam Hospital
Carthage Area Hospital
Catskill Regional Medical Center
Catskill Regional Medical Center—Grover M. Hermann Division
Cayuga Medical Center at Ithaca
Champlain Valley Physicians Hospital Medical Center
Chenango Memorial Hospital
Claxton-Hepburn Medical Center
Clifton Springs Hospital and Clinic
Clifton-Fine Hospital
Cobleskill Regional Hospital
Columbia Memorial Hospital
Community Memorial Hospital
Coney Island Hospital
Cortland Regional Medical Center
Crouse Hospital
Cuba Memorial Hospital
DeGraff Memorial Hospital
Delaware Valley Hospital
Eastern Long Island Hospital
Eastern Niagara Hospital Lockport
Eastern Niagara Hospital Newfane
Elizabethtown Community Hospital
Ellenville Regional Hospital
Elmhurst Hospital Center
Erie County Medical Center
F.F. Thompson Hospital
21
Faxton-St. Luke’s Healthcare—St. Luke’s Memorial
Flushing Hospital Medical Center
Forest Hills Hospital
Franklin Hospital
Geneva General Hospital
Glen Cove Hospital
Glens Falls Hospital
Good Samaritan Hospital Medical Center
Gouverneur Hospital
Harlem Hospital Center
HealthAlliance—Broadway Campus
HealthAlliance—Mary’s Avenue Campus
Highland Hospital of Rochester
Hospital for Special Surgery
Huntington Hospital
Interfaith Medical Center
Ira Davenport Memorial Hospital, Inc.
Jacobi Medical Center
Jamaica Hospital Medical Center
John T. Mather Memorial Hospital
Jones Memorial Hospital
Kenmore Mercy Hospital
Kings County Hospital Center
Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center
Lake Shore Health Care Center at TLC Health Network
Lenox Hill Hospital
Lewis County General Hospital
Lincoln Medical and Mental Health Center
Little Falls Hospital
Long Island Jewish Medical Center
Lutheran Medical Center
Maimonides Medical Center
Margaretville Memorial Hospital
Massena Memorial Hospital
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
Mercy Hospital of Buffalo
Mercy Medical Center
Metropolitan Hospital Center
MidHudson Regional Hospital of Westchester Medical Center
Millard Fillmore Suburban Hospital
Montefiore Medical Center—Einstein Division
Montefiore Medical Center—Henry and Lucy Moses Division
Montefiore Medical Center—The North Division
21
NYSPFP-PARTICIPATING HOSPITALS cont.
Montefiore Mount Vernon Hospital
Montefiore New Rochelle Hospital
Moses-Ludington Hospital—Ticonderoga
Mount Sinai Beth Israel
Mount Sinai Beth Israel Brooklyn
The Mount Sinai Hospital
Mount Sinai Queens
Mount Sinai Roosevelt
Mount Sinai St. Luke’s
Nathan Littauer Hospital
New York Community Hospital of Brooklyn
New York Hospital Queens
New York Methodist Hospital
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital—Allen Pavilion
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital—Columbia University Medical
Center
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital—Lawrence
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital—Hudson Valley Hospital
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital—Lower Manhattan
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital—New York Weill Cornell Medical
Center
Niagara Falls Memorial Medical Center
Nicholas H. Noyes Memorial Hospital
North Central Bronx Hospital
North Shore University Hospital
Northern Dutchess Hospital
Northern Westchester Hospital
Nyack Hospital
O’Connor Hospital
Olean General Hospital
Oneida Healthcare
Orange Regional Medical Center
Orleans Community Health
Oswego Health
Peconic Bay Medical Center
Phelps Memorial Hospital Center
Plainview Hospital
Putnam Hospital Center
Queens Hospital Center
Richmond University Medical Center
River Hospital
Rome Memorial Hospital
Roswell Park Cancer Institute
22
Samaritan Hospital—Troy
Samaritan Medical Center—Watertown
Saratoga Hospital
Schuyler Hospital, Inc.
Seton Health
Sisters of Charity Hospital of Buffalo
Sisters of Charity Hospital—St. Joseph Campus
Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Hospital
South Nassau Communities Hospital
Southampton Hospital
Southside Hospital
St. Barnabas Hospital
St. Catherine of Siena Medical Center
St. Charles Hospital
St. Elizabeth Medical Center—Utica
St. Francis Hospital, The Heart Center
St. James Mercy Hospital
St. John’s Episcopal Hospital South Shore
St. John’s Riverside Hospital—Andrus Pavilion
St. Joseph Hospital (Bethpage)
St. Joseph’s Hospital Health Center (Syracuse)
St. Joseph’s Hospital Medical Center (Yonkers)
St. Luke’s Cornwall Hospital—Newburgh
St. Peter’s Hospital
Staten Island University Hospital
Staten Island University Hospital—South Site
Stony Brook University Medical Center
SUNY Downstate Medical Center
Syosset Hospital
UHS Binghamton General Hospital
UHS Wilson Regional Medical Center
United Memorial Medical Center
Unity Hospital
Vassar Brothers Medical Center
WCA Hospital
Westchester Medical Center
White Plains Hospital
Winthrop-University Hospital
Women and Children’s Hospital of Buffalo
Woodhull Medical and Mental Health Center
Wyckoff Heights Medical Center
Wyoming County Community Health System
MESSAGE FROM THE CO-DIRECTORS
Three years ago, hospitals around the State joined with HANYS and GNYHA to improve hospital care
and patient outcomes through the collective effort of the New York State Partnership for Patients.
Leaders emerged at each hospital to help drive innovative improvements and teams of champions
were developed to implement, measure, and sustain those efforts.
Staff at all levels attended dozens of webinars and in-person sessions, and participated in coaching
calls to share best practices and learn from local and national experts, as well as each other. Hospitals
united to achieve common goals: reduce hospital-acquired conditions and avoidable readmissions.
NYSPFP admires the major changes and progress so many hospitals have made in such a short period of time. Care for thousands of patients has been improved because of your efforts, and even
more lives will be impacted as these innovations in care delivery are spread and sustained.
That so much was accomplished—amid the responsibilities and challenges you each face every day—
demonstrates how much you care about the patients you serve and your dedication to improving the
quality of their lives.
We are proud to have worked so closely with you. Your deep-seated commitment has helped advance our shared mission, and your success is measured by the most important metrics of all—safer
patients, better care, and enriched lives.
Congratulations, and keep up the great work.
Kathleen Ciccone
Lorraine Ryan
Co-director, NYSPFP
Co-director, NYSPFP
23
ENDNOTES
1. A.J. Weiss and Elixhauser, A. “Characteristics of Adverse Drug Events Originating During the Hospitals Stay, 2011.” Healthcare
Cost and Utilization Project (October 2013). Available at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK174680/ (accessed January
25, 2015).
2. Health Research Educational Trust (HRET), American Hospital Association (AHA). “Adverse Drug Events.” Available at http://
www.hret-hen.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2&Itemid=127 (accessed January 26, 2015).
3. HRET, AHA. “On the CUSP: Stop CAUTI Implementation Guide,” access through CAUTI: Implementation Guide (February
2014). Available at http://www.hret-hen.org/index.php?option=com_phocadownload&view=category&id=174&Itemid=261
(accessed January 25, 2015).
4. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). “Bloodstream Infection Event (Central Line–Associated Bloodstream Infection and Non-Central Line–Associated Bloodstream Infection)” (January 2015). Available at http://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/PDFs/
pscManual/4PSC_CLABScurrent.pdf (accessed January 26, 2015).
5. Currie, L. “Chapter 10: Fall and Injury Prevention,” Patient Safety and Quality: An Evidence-Based Handbook for Nurses (April
2008). Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), Rockville, MD. Available at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/
NBK2653/ (accessed January 29, 2015).
6. AHRQ. “Preventing Pressure Ulcers in Hospitals: A Toolkit for Improving Quality of Care” (October 2014). Available at http://
www.ahrq.gov/professionals/systems/long-term-care/resources/pressure-ulcers/pressureulcertoolkit/index.html (accessed January 29, 2015).
7. Anderson, D.J., Podgorny, K., and Berrios-Torres, S., et. al. “Strategies to Prevent Surgical Site Infections in Acute Care Hospitals: 2014 Update.” Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology (June 2014); vol. 35, no. 6. Available at http://www.jstor.org/
stable/10.1086/676022 (accessed January 26, 2015).
8. CDC. “Surgical Site Infection (SSI) Toolkit Activity C: ELC Prevention Collaboratives (December 21, 2009). Available at http://
www.cdc.gov/HAI/ssi/ssi.html (available under “Toolkits”; accessed January 26, 2015).
9. CDC. “Device-Associated Module: Ventilator-Associated Event Protocol” (January 2015). Available at http://www.cdc.gov/
nhsn/PDFs/pscManual/10-VAE_FINAL.pdf (accessed January 26, 2015).
10. HRET, AHA. “Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia Change Package” (2014). Available at: http://www.hret-hen.org/ ( item under
Ventilator Associated Events “Resources”; accessed January 26, 2015).
11. Dudeck, M.A., Weiner, L.M., et al. “National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) Report, Data Summary for 2012, Device-Associated Module.” American Journal of Infection Control (2013); 41(12): 1148–66. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/
PDFs/2012-data-summary-nhsn.pdf (accessed January 29, 2015).
12. Maynard, G., and Stein, J. “Preventing Hospital-Acquired Venous Thromboembolism: A Guide for Effective Quality Improvement.” AHRQ (August 2008); available at http://www.ahrq.gov/professionals/quality-patient-safety/patient-safety-resources/
resources/vtguide/vtguide.pdf (accessed January 29, 2015).
13. Gerhardt, G., Yemane, A., Hickman, P., et al. “Data Shows Reduction in Medicare Hospital Readmission Rates During 2012.” Medicare & Medicaid Research Review (2013) vol. 3, no. 2. Available at http://www.cms.gov/mmrr/Downloads/MMRR2013_003_02_
b01.pdf (accessed January 29, 2015).
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© 2015 NYS Partnership for Patients