Medical mistakes in hospitals can range from serving a sugary dinner
to a person with diabetes to giving someone the wrong surgical
procedure. To help reduce risks such as these, hospitals and others
in health care are setting patient safety guidelines. In fact,
Preferred Choices PPO identified patient safety as a quality priority
for 2004 and 2005. Until recently, though, there weren't any national
patient safety standards.
The National Quality Forum (NQF) developed
a list of 30
health care safe practices that all health care providers
can follow to reduce
the risk of harm to patients. For example, one practice involves creating
a culture of safety; others involve matching care needs to what the
provider can do, improving information transfer and communication,
and using medication safely. The 30 standards came from 220 safety
practices, including the Leapfrog
Group’s four safety “leaps.”
These
bullet points represent what we expect of our participating hospitals.
- Complete
the annual hospital survey on patient safety as administered
by the Michigan Health and Safety Coalition.
- Comply with the patient
safety guidelines developed by the Michigan Health and Safety
Coalition.
- Adhere to the Leapfrog group national patient safety standards.
- Adhere to the Joint Commission for the Accreditation of Hospitals
Organization (JCAHO) patient safety goals.
- Adhere to the National
Quality Forum Patient Safety Standards.
We partner with multiple
health plans and employers in Michigan to endorse the Leapfrog
Group patient safety standards
and the Michigan
Health and Safety Coalition guidelines. Together, by
jointly adopting these standards and guidelines for hospital
safety,
the partnership
we have with our participating hospitals and physicians
will improve patient safety across the network.
See the summary
of the survey results for our participating hospitals.
Read more
about the survey by visiting the Michigan
Health and Safety Coalition online.
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