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Patient_Safety_Learning

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Everything posted by Patient_Safety_Learning

  1. Content Article
    Restrictive practices are things that limit the rights of a person, like being able to move around freely. Restrictive Practice is used to stop a person from doing behaviours of concern. These Specialised Services Quality Dashboards (SSQD) are designed to provide assurance on the quality of care by collecting information about outcomes from healthcare providers. SSQDs are a key tool in monitoring the quality of services, enabling comparison between service providers and supporting improvements over time in the outcomes of services commissioned by NHS England.
  2. Content Article
    This short and informative guide, produced by the Quality Care Commission, is for services who may be dealing with challenging behaviour. It includes definitions of the different types of restrictive interventions and directs providers to the evidence they need to provide in order to reassure the regulator that such practice is well governed and safe.
  3. Content Article Comment
    Hi Derek, I've added it as an attachment as the link is no longer available. Hopefully you are able to download this now.
  4. Community Post
    @ElspethJ that doesn't sound like it offered what you needed? What services would you like to see available for people with Long Covid, particularly those who haven't been hospitalised? Did your GP give any indication that anything else was in the pipeline?
  5. Content Article Comment
    Hi @Lea I spoke to another person who has been suffering from persisting symptoms of Covid and they advised that a rehab service might be set up at Beccles hospital to serve people from east Suffolk and south Norfolk. Worth trying to call them, and asking your GP for an update/ info too as they may know more about new local resources.
  6. Community Post
    From the Head of ICU at the Royal Free (shared via Facebook): “Dear All, I have just finished a very useful ICU / NHS Nightingale teleconference, the aim of which was to consolidate experiences about CV19 and how best to manage the disease. I have provided a summary below. Please understand that the information is experience, not evidence. I think it highlights a number of areas that we need to discuss URGENTLY as a group. The take home message is that advice given at the beginning of this journey needs to be adapted as we learn more about CV19. The other important thing to begin to understand is that this disease has distinct phases and treatment will differ as patients move through these phases. The call had about 80 people on it, most listening. There were about ten “experts” invited to speak, from high volume centres. I represented our site. Others included Georges, GSST & Brompton. Ventilation - Early high PEEP is probably not the right strategy and may be harmful. This is not ARDS in the early phase of the illness. - Avoid spontaneous ventilation early in ICU admission as also may be harmful. - There is clear microvascular thrombosis happening in the pulmonary circulation, which leads to an increased dead space. - Also some evidence of early pulmonary fibrosis reported from Italy, possibly oxygen related, possibly inflammation related. - Not many patients have reached extubation yet in London, re-intubation seems to be common. I highlighted our experiences of airway swelling / stridor / reintubation. - Brompton are seeing wedge infarcts in the lungs on imaging, along with pulmonary thrombosis without DVT. - Proning is essential and should be done early. Don’t just do it once. Threshold for many centres is a PF ratio of 13, but all agreed, do it even earlier. - Early on in the disease, the benefit of proning lasts < 4 hours when turned back to supine, as the disease progresses into a more ARDS type picture, the effect is more long lasting. - Many centres using inhaled nitric oxide and prostacyclin with good effect. Tachyphylaxis with NO after 4-5 days. - Generally people are using humidified circuits with HMEs. - A very interesting thing they are doing at Georges is cohorting by phase of disease i.e. early, late, extubation / trachy. It involves more moving of patients but helps each team to focus on things more easily. - Leak test before extubation is crucial, others are also seeing airway swelling. - Wait longer than usual before extubating, high reintubation rates reported. Do not extubatne if inflam markers still high. My conclusions from this are: - Less aggressive PEEP strategy at the beginning of the disease and go straight for proning. - Thromboembolic disease is prevalent, look for it. No one is sure about whether we should anti-coagulate everyone, this is probably too risky. - An extubation protocol is needed immediately. - We should consider using inhaled prostacyclin again (like we previously did) as it seems to be working early in the disease. Fluid balance - All centres agreed that we are getting this wrong. - Most patients come to ICU after a few days of illness where their temp was 38-40 and they were hyperventilating i.e. severely dehydrated. - High rates of AKI being caused by over zealous driving with frusemide, leading to unnecessary CVVHF. - Hypovolaemia leads to poor pulmonary perfusion and increased dead space. - Centres echo’ing their patients are seeing a lot of RV dysfunction without raised PA pressure. - Many have improved oliguria by dropping the PEEP i.e. these patients are really hypovolaemic. [On nights I have observed many of our patients with a zero fluid balance and temperature of 39 i.e. they will be 2-3 litres negative in reality.] - Most centres are therefore now backing off of strict zero balance, particularly in hyperpyrexia. They are moving more towards avoidance of large positive fluid balance. - Lung ‘leak’ not as prominent in this disease as classic ARDS My conclusions from this are: - Avoid hypovolaemia as it will impede gas exchange and cause AKI. Progression to CVVHF increases mortality. - Avoid hypervolaemia - How we achieve this is difficult, but the frusemide and noradrenaline cocktail needs to be carefully tailored, especially in pyrexial patients. - Echo patients to understand their volume status. Renal - Higher than predicted need for CVVHF - ? Due to excess hypovolaemia. - Microthrombi in kidneys probably also contributing to AKI. - CVVHF circuits clot frequently. Georges and Kings now fully anticoagulant the patient (rather than the circuit) as it is the only way they can prevent this. One centre using full dose LMWH as they have run out of pumps. - Kings now beginning acute peritoneal dialysis as running out of CVVHF machines. My conclusions from this are: - Aggressive anticoagulant strategy required for CVVHF, potentially systemic. - If we run out of machines, PD may / may not help (our previous experiences with it are not great, but I have no alternative other than using CVVHF like intermittent dialysis and sharing machines) Workforce - A ’tactical commander’ is essential on every shift, who is not directly responsible the care of ICU patients. - Most centres now getting towards 1:6 nursing ratio with high level of support workers on ICU. - Training has largely fallen by the wayside as it is too large a task. People are being trained on the job. My conclusions from this are: - On call consultant to coordinate but not be responsible for patients (as is the model we have now adopted). - We need one support worker per patient. Other centres are using everyone they have. From med students to dental hygienists. We are behind the curve ++ with this. Last time I was on a night shift, theatres were full of non-medical staff refusing to help ICU - this is unacceptable. There were some brief discussion about CPAP: - Proning patients on CPAP on the ward is very effective, I tried it the other day - worked wonders. - Prolonged use of CPAP may (I stress the word may) lead to patients being more systemically unwell when they get to ICU. - Considerable oxygen supply issues with old school CPAP systems. My conclusions from this are: - As per local guidelines, assess the effectiveness of CPAP after an hour, if it isn’t effective then bail out and consider intubation. - If effective, regular review is required. If at any point it is failing, bail out and consider ventilation. - Whilst we may have a shortage of ventilators, holding people indefinitely on CPAP may be short-sighted as it may be converting single organ failure into multiple organ failure. OK, that’s all I have. I will stress again that this is simply a summary of discussions, none of which are backed up by large, robust multi-centre RCTs. My conclusions after each section are nothing more than suggestions to be discussed. We need to adapt fast to what we learn about this disease and learn from our colleagues at other centre. We are all in this together and joined up thinking is required. Lastly, we desperately need to look at our own data to understand whether we are getting this right or not. Good luck, stay stay safe and be kind to one another. Dan Daniel Martin OBE Macintosh Professor of Anaesthesia Intensive Care Lead for High Consequence Infectious Diseases Royal Free Hospital London Please share your comments below.
  7. Content Article
    This podcast, published by Coda, covers a wide array of topics, from PPE to simulation. Martin Bromiley (Human Factors expert), talks about the ways human factors affect teams and safety and share communications tactics to help alleviate potential issues. 
  8. Community Post
    A Facebook follower, commented the following re emergency dental services and local responses...
  9. Community Post
    My mum has been losing weight for almost six months (unexplained). She is undergoing tests to see if she has a rare adrenal tumour. Due partly to how long the analysis takes for these tests, they have taken a long time. Her consultant appointment is due end of April - now to be done over the telephone. If they do discover it is the adrenal tumour, she would need further investigation to identify whether or not it is cancerous (usually not cancerous) and potentially an operation to remove it so she can recover (fairly good outcome stats). My concern is that if this appointment gets cancelled, she cannot afford to continue to lose more weight, she will literally waste away (she is only 7 stone something at the moment). Will she just be left to deteriorate?
  10. Content Article Comment
    Amazing blog...is everyone really being expected to bring their uniforms back to their family homes to wash? As a patient, I am so angry that our NHS heroes are feeling frightened unprotected and that they are failing in multiple areas of life, when they are actually holding everything together for the country.
  11. Content Article
    Ahead of the Health and Social Care Select Committee’s next oral evidence session, Patient Safety Learning have raised several urgent safety issues with the Chair, Jeremy Hunt MP. Below is a blog summarising our submission to the Committee.
  12. Community Post
    Hi, these may be of interest/help... Mental health and well-being during coronavirus crisis (15 March 2020) WHO: Coping with stress during the 2019-nCoV outbreak
  13. Community Post
    This blog may be of interest to this thread too - Coronavirus means difficult, life-changing decisions for me and my cancer patients
  14. Community Post
    Not sure if this is the same one Helen, but there's a documentary with Stacey Dooley out tomorrow - she spends some time in a '136 unit' (designated place of safety). https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p082bxzn
  15. Content Article
    Linda Millband is the national practice lead for medical negligence at Thompsons Solicitors. She led the team responsible for fighting, and winning, a legal battle on behalf of 650 ex-patients of disgraced breast surgeon Ian Paterson. Ahead of the publication of the Independent Inquiry into Ian Paterson, Linda reflects on how it should be used as a catalyst for positive change in private hospitals.
  16. Content Article
    A blog by Patient Safety Learning's Stephanie O'Donohue on how language can help or hinder patient safety and what clinicians can do to work towards a 'safer' use of words.
  17. Content Article Comment
    Really interesting video, particularly when she speaks about how she felt that she was sometimes viewed as a 'difficult patient' while trying to contribute to her own safe care.
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