Showing posts with label Risk Management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Risk Management. Show all posts

Monday, April 16, 2018

Leading the shop floor - Unsolicited advices!

Night shifts tire out A&E doctors and lead to considerable amount of distress. Things can go worse due to lack of staffing, complicated patients (who always turn up during these hours), unfamiliar (or familiar) locum doctors around. Explicit details vary depending on the "local settings and culture of Emergency Medicine" but overall theme remains the same to manage a busy department overnight. By morning, we end up signing countless ECGs, ordering several medications (with minimal background info available) and listening to numerous SHO/F2 case presentations. Essentially, we walk on the very thin ice during night shifts and there are good chances of making errors. 

Is there a way to circumvent this or at least minimize this risk?
What can we do to manage flow better and avoid handing over an 8 hour waiting time?


1. Using checklists
  • Procedural Sedation Checklist
  • Resuscitation checklist 
  • Post Cardiac Arrest Care checklist
  • Reading a CXR checklist
  • ECG checklist 
  • Discharge Checklist



These can reduce cognitive overloading, save time and minimize errors, especially during the busy hours.

2. Listening to FY/SHOs presentations 
Take time and set rapport with your night team. Get a sense of their background, previous experiences and what rotations they have been through so far. Allocate tasks keeping this in your mind. Early on, try and see (at least eyeball) every patient that they are allocated and once you understand their clinical acumen, go with that. 




Being approachable with junior doctors is they key for patient safety. Ask them if they are concerned about anything in particular or if they want you to examine the patient. 

3. Documentation and Risk Management 
Diagnostic uncertainty is a part of Emergency Medicine. it is almost impossible to come with a definite diagnosis within a span of few hours. Sometimes, it takes weeks and months to reach a definitive diagnosis after several out-patient visits. Our job is to think about life threats. We work on the basis of probability and likelihood. Explain this to a patient. Most of them will appreciate and just need some reassurance. Prepared scripts can be useful here. For instance, discharging a low-risk chest pain. Document a clinical decision rule such as HEART score and tell them that:


Based on our evaluation today, your blood reports, and serial ECGs, your risk of heart disease is extremely low. I think your symptoms are likely due to acid reflux. I am going to prescribe some medications and discharge you. With aging, we all develop some degree of blockage in blood vessels around the heart and you may have that as well but this does not mean that you are having a heart attack. You need to follow up with you General Practitioner as an out-patient for further evaluation, see response to reflux medications and a for a definite diagnosis. However, if things change anytime i.e you feel unwell, sweaty, dizzy, short of breath or concerned about anything else then please come back to A&E and we will be happy to assess you again. We are here 24x7. 

Document this conversation briefly in the chart briefly under "Medical Decision Making". Your chart should depict your thought process and rationale behind your decisions. Use scoring systems like Wells, PERC, HEART to manage risk. Occasionally, you will see a patient who asks for a 100% definite diagnosis. Ask about their concerns and set expectations as soon as you see them. If you are sending someone home who looks clinically very well but with a unclear diagnosis, safety net them and arrange further follow up as an out-patient. 



Documentation: It is best to finish documentation/clerking as you go rather than carrying a bunch of charts with you to finish after the morning handover. After the handover, you would want to leave the ED ASAP and this will certainly compromise the quality of your notes. Write explicit and legible notes. 

Patient info leaflets and discharge advice: If you think they are going home, hand over specific discharge leaflets to them beforehand. Tell them to have a glance through them and ask any questions. This keeps them busy and helps to understand their ailment better. Moreover, you are medicolegally safer since you hand over written red fags to them specifying when to return to ED.

4. Triage led blood sets (for minors) - to expedite decision making
  • Young Chest Pain 
  • Pleuritic Chest Pain 
  • CP with risk factors
  • Abdo pain female
  • Abdo pain male 
  • Shortness of Breath 
  • Needle Stick Injury
  • Febrile Illness
  • Fever in Traveller 

Triage led to blood tests based on chief complaints improves the flow but these should be interpreted carefully. Sending troponins for every 20yo with CP will lead to nowhere and may lead to unnecessary further testing. I advocate that tests such as d-dimer and hs-troponin should only be ordered after discussion with a consultant or any senior physician whenever possible. Both these tests are very non-specific but if used judiciously, they can be very useful. Routine second troponins lead to unnecessary long waits and prolong the length of stay. False positive d-dimers subject patients to the unnecessary risk of anticoagulation and follow up. 

Avoid "just to be sure" type of investigations. Do not start hunting for problems in a well-looking 90-year-old. Follow guidelines for imaging and deviate only if you feel strongly about something. If a blood test is not going to alter your management, then don't do it. Check out RCEM guidelines on redundant activities here. 


5. Situational Awareness and communication
While running the show as a registrar (equivalent to final year resident in the US), do less and allocate more. Having a good sense of what is going around with patients seen by junior doctors is crucial. Anticipate further care needs of every patient. For instance, eyeballing patients on arrival and organizing imaging such as X Rays and Head Scans can save a lot of time. Ask yourself:
  • What can you do for this patient in ED?
  • Who is well and who is sick? 
  • Who needs admission and who can be discharged?
Seasoned clinicians almost always decide to admit v/s discharge after 2-3 minute conversation with a patient, occasionally just after eyeballing a patient! Verbalise a clear plan to junior doctors and if possible, write it on the chart. 

Keep a track of co-morbidities and social issues (carers, living alone, frail elderly demented, homeless, domestic violence) before discharging patients. Think twice before discharging an elderly during twilight hours. On a 10 hour shift, I typically spend just about 1 hour with patients and rest of my time goes in getting things done - requesting scans, discussion with Radiology and inpatient teams, adding blood tests, calling labs, difficult cannulas, and most-importantly documentation. When running the shop floor, it is important to delegate as much as you can. 
  • IV Cannulation - Ask the nursing staff to keep the USG machine and equipment ready
  • Joint reduction - Ask FY/SHO to prep everything - hook them to monitor and keep sedation drugs ready 
  • FAST/AAA Scan - Move the patient to a room and keep the USG machine jelled  
  • Wound Repair - Procedure nurse to prepare equipment 
If you are leading the department, then your time is precious. Everyone will be out there looking for you (nurses, junior docs, angry patients, in-patient teams, difficult referrals) and don't involve yourself in something time-taking procedures. 

I work in an enormous ED and it can take me up to 2 minutes to walk from one end to the other. Having a list of phone numbers of HDU, Minors, Resus, Assessment areas can be immensely useful. You can then just call and liaise with nurses rather than physically going to each of these areas. 



Communicate with nurses : Nurses are the backbone of your team and if they stand by your side, things go very smooth. Know them by their names and let them know that you are running the shop floor before you begin your shift. Assign them tasks like putting back slabs, getting medications quickly, patients who need monitoring and frequent observations. 

6. Calling for help
Knowing our limitations is crucial and we must know what we exactly want a specialist to do when we call for a consult. Whether it is ITU, Anesthetics, Trauma team - the theme remains the same. Whenever possible, know their names and with time set a rapport with them. Developing negotiation skills while conversing with a specialist is a skill that we all must learn. 


7. Safeguarding and other clerical work 
On a busy shift, the last thing we want is a doctor held up in sorting out safeguarding and social issues for a patient. Undoubtedly, these tasks are important our job should be to raise concerns about them. FIlling 6 page long referral forms and sending e-mails to a group of people can be very time-consuming and this can seriously halt the flow of the department. I strongly believe that these tasks would be best done by a clerk (non-medical) as this does not require a medical degree. 


If you have anymore thoughts on this, then please feel free to comment and share your wisdom.


Posted by:

              
     Lakshay Chanana
     
     Speciality Doctor
     Northwick Park Hospital
     Department of Emergency Medicine
     England

     @EMDidactic



Monday, December 26, 2016

Sorting out Gabrahat (Anxiety) ~ The Common Complaint in the ED

 Gabrahat (Anxiety) is often a common complaint with many implications.
While working in Emergency Departments in India I have been surprised with what the ultimate diagnosis was when I investigated Gabrahat.
For me Gabrahat is as vague as the Horizon and I take this complaint very seriously. It is very easy for any Nurse or Emergency Physician to get framed and just label Gabrahat as Anxiety or Hysteria.
This can be the Epic Blunder of Large Proportions. 

Many times relatives who accompany the patient will Frame the Emergency Physician by saying words like “There is Tension”. What they mean to imply is Gabarahat is Stress Related.

I often relate Gabrahat to a “SENSE OF IMPENDING DOOM”. When you grade GABRAHAT in that perspective, it guides the Emergency Physician to be very Proactive and diligent.


Let me share a few blasts from the past which I have modified for the sake of Education.


Case One:


Middle Age Female comes to the ED saying that she is feeling SOB. She is hyperventilating and Diaphoretic. She says that she has been having pain all over the body and fells GABRAHAT as if something is going to happen to her.
Her vitals are stable but she continues to breathe hard and breath fast. The relatives were doing a Fine job of Framing her as hysteria.

Rapid Fire Questionnaire Labs EKG Trop and a X-ray Beta HCG UA and a BNP are ordered.


On examining the patient the only Finding is the breathing. Lorazepam given IV and Oxygen started and ABG Ordered which is showing alkalosis. Aspirin given and a bedside Glucose is Normal. She settles down but continues to breathe hard. A CTA Chest is ordered. 
There are massive shower Pulmonary Emboli. Pt gets thrombolyzed and goes to ICU.

Case Two:


A 55-year-old women comes with GABRAHAT. She says that she is afraid something is going to happen. She has no other symptom. She has no Past Psyc Issues.
Labs EKG Trop and an X-ray UA ordered. She has had a prior hysterectomy.


She had an ST Elevation MI. Went to the Cath Lab. No Symptoms at all. No Past History at all.


Case Three:


30-Year-old man came saying He had Gabrahat and felt that there was Irritation in the Chest. NO PAIN BUT ONLY IRRITATION. Exam Past History negative.
Cardiac labs CBC RFT LFT was negative so was his EKG and Xray. Against the will of the Internal Medicine Colleagues Pt admitted. 4 hour repeat EKG and Trop was placed from the ED. His EKG was normal but his Trop had become positive.


Cardiology who scheduled the patient for a cath after admitting him to CCU found a Tight Lcx Lesion which needed a Stent.


Case Four:


48 Female with Gabrahat. Second visit after discharge from the hospital. Come back saying she is afraid. No Pain, No Focus of Infection. 
CBC RFT LFT Cardiac Labs X-ray Beta HCG and UA Negative.

Says her Mind tell her Something is wrong. She has GABRAHAT.


Was admitted in a nursing home. CBC Electrolytes creatinine and SGPT was done and after overnight IV Fluids patients sent home. A CT Head done and the patient had SAH. No Neck stiffness no Eye signs. Admitted to Neurosciences ICU
The only thing that prompted a CT Head was “My Mind is telling Me. This was perceived as Hallucinations hence CT Head Ordered.


Case Five:


18 Year Old Male comes with Gabrahat with Hallucinations. He was at friends party and says “ I have gabrahat as I see a ghost”.
Tox Work up was done and it was positive for multiple substances.


Routine CBC RFT LFT EKG Trop UA and Xray with a CT Head and Tox Screen were done.


Case Six:


40 year old male comes saying that he has Gabrahat and he feels like a huge Log of wood just fell on his head and nailed his whole body vertically into the ground. Clinical Exam and Vitals were normal.
CBC LFT RFT Trop EKG Xray negative

No Neck stiffness Neuro exam normal. He kept saying I am afraid I am sinking into the ground.


CTA Aortagram ordered: He had a dissection from Thorax to iliac bifurcation.
Admitted to CVTS Sx.




Summary:
  • Basic Approach should be T/P/R/BP/Pulse Ox
  • I always order a CBC LFT RFT EKG Trop CXR. Looking for Rhythm abnormalities is also important. Fever can also cause Gabrahat.
  • In Females in the Pregnancy Age group a HCG-UA is ordered
  • If Patient has SOB I will R/O Thoracic Causes like Dissection/Pneumothorax and PE.
  • If Patient has a presentation of Altered Mental Status I always order a CT Head.
  • If Toxicology screen is available, I will order one.
  • Co-Symptoms should guide further investigations.
  • Discussing with the Relatives in key to educate them- that this is not Hysteria / Tension / Stress. Those are the diagnosis to be considered once Major Life threatening causes are ruled out.
  • I have often Seen Marital Discord / Intimate Partner Abuse to be causes of GABRAHAT. So Going deeper into the history. Sitting with the patient with Privacy is the key.
  • Anxiety / Panic attack also can be on the differential once Major causes are ruled out.
  • Being a Compassionate Emergency Physician is the key. Communication is the answer and Competency to Care is crucial.
  • GABRAHAT CAN KILL !
I want to Share a Web Review of what Non EM Experts say about GABRAHAT.
I feel a Well Trained Emergency Physician leaves no stone unturned to do the best for his/her patient

Web Review:

Author:


Dr. Sagar Galwankar

CEO of INDUSEM & Faculty of Emergency Medicine at University of Florida Jacksonville, Florida








Sagar completed his med school from the University of Pune (India). He attained Board Certified in Internal Medicine from the National Board of Examinations in India. Following this, he went on to train at the University of South Florida, USA in areas of International Health Diplomacy, Infectious Diseases and Emergency Medicine. He also holds a MPH from the University of South Florida and is a Board Certified Emergency Physician with the American Board of Emergency Medicine.

Sagar's academic and clinical career spans over a decade with experience in Education, Care and Research both in India and the USA. He has extensively published, cited and honoured for his works in International Medicine, Public Health, Infectious Diseases, Emergency Medicine and Injury Sciences. Sagar is the Founder and CEO of the INDO-US Academic Initiative for Emergency and Trauma and continue to play a defining role in establishing Emergency Medicine as a separate specialty in India.


He has had previous appointments at the University of South Florida and University of Florida in Departments of Emergency Medicine, Internal Medicine, Global Health and Mental Health. His areas of Interest include Emergency Medical Intelligence, Health Policy, Injury Medicine, International Health, Humanitarian Assistance, Quality Health Care Delivery in Emerging Economies and Global Health Diplomacy.  Sagar believes that "The role of the World's Largest and the Oldest Democracies namely India and United States is crucial for the future progress of transitional Economies and Peace across the Globe". Health is Definately an important part of this growth Story.

Originally published at beepers365.blogspot  on 11 December, 2016. Reposted with permission.

Monday, December 7, 2015

What Emergency Physicians Should Know About Informed Consent

Every patient with an intact mental capacity has the right to decide on treatment/procedures that he or she would like undergo. And as Emergency physicians, taking an "informed consent" is something that we do on everyday basis. This is another area where mishaps are likely in a chaotic ED. 

First take home point from this post would be to understand that "even if you perform a procedure that was necessary without any complications, you can still be held liable for not obtaining the consent." Therefore, it is vital to have a clear understanding about "informed consent" to avoid miscommunication and bad outcomes. 

So what does "informed consent" mean?

Informed consent is the process by which the treating health care provider discloses appropriate information to a competent patient so that the patient may make a voluntary choice to accept or refuse treatment (informed refusal). It originates from the legal and ethical right the patient has to direct what happens to their body and from the ethical duty of the physician to involve the patient in her health care. Informed consent may not be applicable only to procedures, but also to other significant management decisions.
Patient should get a clear understanding about the facts and the possible consequences before giving the consent. A good way to do that is, questioning yourself  "if you have disclosed the information clearly enough?" or ask yourself Have I provided the patient with an understanding of what her or she would want to know?




With an informed consent, we invite the patients to participate in the process of "shared decision making." Once again, stay away from medical jargon while explaining something to the patients. 


Elements of a full informed consent?

  • Nature of the decision/procedure 
  • Reasonable alternatives to the proposed intervention (regardless of there costs)
  • The relevant risks, benefits, and uncertainties related to each alternative 
  • Assessment of patient understanding 
  • Acceptance of the intervention by the patient

Concept of Battery

Battery is legally defined as the intentional infliction of offensive or harmful bodily contact, regardless of whether the person was trying to harm or help. For instance, if a surgeon consented a patient for an operation on the right ear and while the patient was under anesthesia, he discovered the left ear was worse and operated on that ear with a poor outcome. The patient will get the damages not based on malpractice, but on lack of obtaining informed consent.


To prove lack of informed consent, patient must prove that:
  • Physician failed to disclose adequate information regarding benefits and risks of proposed treatment, as well as alternative treatment options
  • Patient need not prove negligence in the performance of the treatment; liability arises solely from inadequate disclosure (Physician is liable even if treatment was medically appropriate and performed skilfully right to damages arises from unauthorized contact)



What is informed refusal?
Informed refusal is when a patient refuses a recommended treatment/ procedure based upon his understanding of facts and implications of not following the treatment.


Waivers to informed consent:
  • If the patient does not have decision-making capacity. Find the proxy, or surrogate decision-maker
  • Implied consent in emergency
  • When the patient has waived consent
  • When a competent patient designates a trusted loved-one to make treatment decisions for him or her
For simple procedures like auscultation, drawing blood, physical examination etc. consent can be skipped (implied consent). We generally do not explain patients about risks, benefits and alternatives for auscultation!


How much information is enough?

There are three ways to look at it:
  • Reasonable physician standard: What would a typical physician say about this intervention? This standard allows the physician to determine what information is appropriate to disclose. This standard is generally considered inconsistent as the focus is on the physician rather than on what the patient needs to know. 
  • Reasonable patient standard: What would the average patient need to know in order to be an informed participant in the decision? This standard focuses on considering what a typical patient would need to know in order to understand the decision at hand. 
  • Subjective standard: What would this particular patient need to know and understand in order to make an informed decision? This standard is the most challenging to incorporate into practice, since it requires tailoring information to each patient.
As a physician, you must disclose all of the information that the patient needs to make a decision, but not so much that it frightens the patient from making a decision that would be of most benefit to him or her. This can sometimes be difficult and this is where you can employ some amount of discretion. I personally go with the "subjective standard" and individualise information as per the needs of each and every the patient. 


Consent Forms:
It is fine to have consent forms signed by the patients before the procedure/major treatment (tPA for stroke), making sure that they are aware of the process and understand it. In the ED, patients are distressed and sometimes they just want things to move quickly. This can be one reason for signing the consent form without going through it in detail. The way these forms are designed is scary. For a minute, if you read it through the patients eyes, it can give you goose bumps for sure. 

This is what a typical consent form says:

I confirm the following:


My physician has explained to me the nature, purpose, and possible consequences of the procedure(s) as well as the risks involved, and the possible complications and/ or alternative methods of treatment. I understand that the explanation I have received is not exhaustive because of unforeseen circumstances that may arise and I have been advised that a more detailed and complete explanation of the preceding matter will be given to me if I so desire. Upon reading the previous statement, I do not desire such further explanations. Furthermore, I acknowledge that I have received no guarantees or assurances as to the results that may be obtained from the performance of this operation or procedure.


When we purchase something (a mobile phone), we all enquire about the warranty/guarantee periods but when a patient submits their body to a physician to carry out a procedure/treatment for their own benefit, there are no assurances because every human body is unique and may respond differently to same treatment. 

These "consent forms" carry little value in the court of law. However they do acknowledge that a discussion took place between the physician and the patient but it is hard to find out what exact bits of the consent form were actually discussed.
  
Risk Management Strategies:

When obtaining an informed consent:

  • Have a meaningful, unhurried conversation with patient. 
  • Make the patient an active participant in the shared decision-making process.
  • Provide supplementary information, such as brochures or videos.
  • Disclose the most severe risks and the most common risks.
  • Don't forget to mention about the alternatives.
  • Obtain signed informed consent form.
  • Avoid giving casual answers e.g This surgery is as risky as any other major surgery or I have done dozens of such surgeries. Be a little sensitive.
  • Be professional.
  • Avoid quoting exact numbers or percentages.
  • Most important: Never ask a colleague or junior physician to obtain an informed consent on your behalf. This leads to confusion, chaos and miscommunication. Person doing the procedure (Yes, even the the senior physicians) must take the consent. It is important to make sure that the patient and family have the capacity, are clear on the facts and have their concerns addressed by an experienced physician before getting to YES,.

Informed consent requires disclosure, understanding, capacity and voluntariness. It is not just another signed document. Patients must have an intelligent understanding of their diagnosis, risks/benefits of proposed treatment and alternative options.



References:

  1. Appelbaum PS. Assessment of patient’s competence to consent to treatment. New England Journal of Medicine. 2007; 357: 1834-1840. 
  2. Moore, Gregory P., et al. "What Emergency Physicians Should Know About Informed Consent: Legal Scenarios, Cases, and Caveats." Academic Emergency Medicine 21.8 (2014): 922-927.