Between the flags: implementing a safety-net system at scale to recognise and manage deteriorating patients in the New South Wales Public Health System

In 2005, the Clinical Excellence Commission (CEC) found that unrecognised patient deterioration remained an important problem in New South Wales (NSW) public hospitals. The challenge was to design and implement an effective and sustainable safety-net system in all 225 NSW public hospitals. The CEC&#...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal for quality in health care 2017-02, Vol.29 (1), p.130-136
Hauptverfasser: PAIN, CHARLES, GREEN, MALCOLM, DUFF, COLETTE, HYLAND, DEBORAH, PANTLE, ANNETTE, FITZPATRICK, KIMBERLEY, HUGHES, CLIFF
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container_end_page 136
container_issue 1
container_start_page 130
container_title International journal for quality in health care
container_volume 29
creator PAIN, CHARLES
GREEN, MALCOLM
DUFF, COLETTE
HYLAND, DEBORAH
PANTLE, ANNETTE
FITZPATRICK, KIMBERLEY
HUGHES, CLIFF
description In 2005, the Clinical Excellence Commission (CEC) found that unrecognised patient deterioration remained an important problem in New South Wales (NSW) public hospitals. The challenge was to design and implement an effective and sustainable safety-net system in all 225 NSW public hospitals. The CEC's system was designed in collaboration with a broad coalition of partners, including clinicians, managers, system administrators and collaborating agencies. A five-element system comprising governance, standard calling criteria in standard observation charts, two-level clinical emergency response systems (CERS) in each facility, an education programme and evaluation, was designed for state-wide implementation. This system was called 'Between the Flags' (BTF). Implementation was led by the CEC on behalf of a NSW coalition, and commenced in January 2010 with the implementation of the Standard Adult General Observation Chart, awareness training for all staff and a CERS in each facility. Since the introduction of BTF, the cardiac arrest rate has declined by 42% (P < 0.05) and the Rapid Response rate has increased by 135.9% (P < 0.05) in NSW. The strength of staff support for BTF has grown with the proportion of respondents strongly agreeing that BTF has benefitted patient safety more than doubling from 21% to 44%, and overall agreement rising from 68% to 82% between 2010 and 2012. Key success factors are a focus on governance, standardisation of observation charts and striking the right balance between a rule-based approach and individual clinical judgement.
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subjects Adult
Disease Progression
Heart Arrest - prevention & control
Hospital Rapid Response Team - organization & administration
Hospitals, Public - organization & administration
Humans
Medical Records - standards
New South Wales
Patient Safety - standards
Program Development
Program Evaluation
Quality in Practice
title Between the flags: implementing a safety-net system at scale to recognise and manage deteriorating patients in the New South Wales Public Health System
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