The Ascension Health journey to zero: lessons learned and leadership

In 2002, Ascension Health, a 65-hospital nonprofit health care system, articulated a call to action to provide Healthcare That Works, Healthcare That Is Safe, and Healthcare That Leaves No One Behind. The goal is to provide excellent clinical care with no preventable injuries or deaths by July 2008....

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Veröffentlicht in:Joint Commission journal on quality and patient safety 2007-12, Vol.33 (12), p.739-749
Hauptverfasser: Hendrich, Ann, Tersigni, Anthony R, Jeffcoat, Sally, Barnett, Charles J, Brideau, Leo P, Pryor, David
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container_end_page 749
container_issue 12
container_start_page 739
container_title Joint Commission journal on quality and patient safety
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creator Hendrich, Ann
Tersigni, Anthony R
Jeffcoat, Sally
Barnett, Charles J
Brideau, Leo P
Pryor, David
description In 2002, Ascension Health, a 65-hospital nonprofit health care system, articulated a call to action to provide Healthcare That Works, Healthcare That Is Safe, and Healthcare That Leaves No One Behind. The goal is to provide excellent clinical care with no preventable injuries or deaths by July 2008. Just months from this target date, substantial reductions in events related to eight priorities for action have been documented, and at the current rate more than 2,000 lives a year are being saved compared to the baseline mortality rate. Progress toward the goal of zero preventable injuries or deaths required transformational change. Key steps toward this change included establishing a sense of urgency, creating a guiding coalition (the clinical excellence team), and developing the Destination Statement II. Other key factors in our early success included methods of process and outcomes measurement, the formation of appropriate and diverse leadership groups comprised of primary stakeholders, methods of knowledge transfer, and the involvement and leadership of the Ascension Health Quality Committee and individual health ministry Boards. An ongoing discussion of what "zero preventable deaths and injuries" really means has led to the identification of additional interventions to further reduce preventable injuries and deaths.
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subjects Hospitals, Voluntary - standards
Humans
Leadership
Medical Errors - prevention & control
Missouri
Multi-Institutional Systems - organization & administration
Multi-Institutional Systems - standards
Organizational Case Studies
Organizational Innovation
Organizational Objectives
Process Assessment (Health Care)
Quality Assurance, Health Care
Safety Management
title The Ascension Health journey to zero: lessons learned and leadership
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