Patient Safety Authority 2021 Annual Report Contents Introduction Fast Facts Definitions Executive Summary Strategic Plan Patient Safety Sharing Knowledge | AM Patient Safety Awards Outreach & Education Infant Falls Data Science & Research Financials and Contracts Anonymous Reports/Referrals to DOH Board of Directors Stanton N. Smullens, MD (Chair Emeritus) Denise A. Johnson, MD (Chair) Physician Appointed by the Governor Daniel Glunk, MD, MHCDS (Vice Chair) Appointee of the President Pro Tempore of the Senate Veronica Richards, Esq. (Secretary/Treasurer) Appointee of the Minority Leader of the Senate Arleen Kessler, PharmD, MBA, RPh Pharmacist Appointee of the Governor Kathleen Law, MS, RN Healthcare Worker Appointed by the Governor Amelia Paré, MD Appointee of the Speaker of the House of Representatives Linda Waddell, MSN, RN Nurse Appointed by the Governor Eric Weitz, Esq. Appointee of the Minority Leader of House of Representatives William J. Wenner, MD, JD Physician Appointed by the Governor Leadership Regina M. Hoffman, MBA, RN, Executive Director Howard Newstadt, JD, MBA, Sr. Dir., Finance & Business Ops/CIO/CISO Caitlyn Allen, MPH, Director, Engagement Michelle Bell, BSN, RN, Director, Outreach & Education Rebecca Jones, MBA, RN, Director, Data Science & Research Rodney R. Akers, Esq., Legal Counsel Contractors Katie Adams, MS Tracy Kim, MPS Julia Barndt, MA Shawn Kincaid, BSME, EIT Chris Bonk, MSN, RN Seth Krevat, MD Christian Boxley, BS Donna Lockette Phyllis Bray Natasha Nicol, PharmD Deanna Busog, BS Zoe Pruitt, MA Ram Dixit, MS Raj Ratwani, PhD Dave Eppley Lori Russell, MS, RN Allan Fong, MS Laura Schubel, MPH Ella Franklin, MSN, RN Lucy Stein, MS, OTR/L Barbara Gall Carly Sterner Joanna Grimes, BSN, RN Bev Volpe Jessica Howe, MA Staff JoAnn Adkins, BSN, RN, Senior Infection Preventionist Amanda Bennett, MPH, MLS, Infection Preventionist Christine Bingman, DNP, RN, Infection Preventionist Jeffrey Bomboy, BS, RN, Senior Patient Safety Liaison Lea Anne Gardner, PhD, RN, Patient Safety Analyst Kelly R. Gipson, BSN, RN, Project Manager Amy Harper, PhD, RN, Infection Preventionist Shawn Kepner, MS, Data Analyst Elizabeth Kukielka, PharmD, MA, RPh, Patient Safety Analyst Richard Kundravi, BS, Senior Patient Safety Liaison Christopher Mamrol, BSN, RN, Senior Patient Safety Liaison Karen McKinnon-Lipsett, Admin. Specialist, Executive & Data Science Shelly M. Mixell, Admin. Specialist, Outreach & Education Melanie A. Motts, MEd, RN, Senior Patient Safety Liaison Eugene Myers, BA, Associate Editor, Engagement & Pub. Jessica Oaks, MIT, Program Manager, Data Science & Research Jacqualine Peck, BS, Comm. Specialist, Engagement & Pub. Teresa Plesce, Office Manager/HR Liaison Catherine M. Reynolds, DL, MJ, RN, Senior Patient Safety Liaison Terri Lee Roberts, BSN, RN, Senior Infection Preventionist Christine Sanchez, MPH, Patient Safety Analyst Megan Shetterly, MS, RN, Senior Patient Safety Liaison Krista Soverino, BA, Comm. Specialist, Engagement & Pub. Heather A. Stone, BSW, Admin. Specialist, Engagement & Pub. Matthew Taylor, PhD, Patient Safety Analyst Alex Ulsh, BCS, Systems Administrator/Deputy CISO Susan Wallace, MPH, Senior Patient Safety Liaison Robert Yonash, RN, Senior Patient Safety Liaison Public Board Meetings in 2021 e January 14, 2021 e June 24, 2021 e March 18, 2021 e September 23, 2021 e April 29,2021 e December 9, 2021 Find summary minutes of public board meetings online at patientsafety.pa.gov. Contact Information 333 Market Street - Lobby Level Harrisburg, PA 17101 patientsafety.pa.gov patientsafetyauthority@pa.gov 717.346.0469 Annual Report Production Staff Daniel Glunk Eugene Myers Eric Weitz Krista Soverino Regina Hoffman Heather Stone Caitlyn Allen Introduction G6 | attribute my success to this—l never gave or took an excuse. — Florence Nightingale The World Health Organization (WHO) declared 2020 the Year of the Nurse in honor of Florence Nightingale’s 200th birthday. COVID had other plans. Instead of celebrating two centuries of advancements, nurses and the rest of their healthcare colleagues awoke each day to unprecedented staffing shortages, constant supply chain dis- ruptions, and the deadliest disease in a generation. Yet, they found the resolve to keep taking care of us, even when they were at their breaking point. In response, the WHO named 2021 as asecond Year of the Nurse. We couldn't agree more. Over the past year, we’ve worked with organizations across the state, nation, and globe to improve patient care, on topics ranging from emergence delirium, sepsis, and infant falls to wrong-site surgery—all while watching them battle the pandemic. Contained in these pages are just a smattering of these stories, and some insights learned along the way. We at the Patient Safety Authority thank nurses—and every healthcare hero—for their continued sacrifice. Fast Facts The Patient Safety Authority (PSA) is an in- dependent state agency that collects reports of patient safety events from Pennsylvania healthcare facilities. Pennsylvania is the only state that requires acute care facilities to re- port all incidents of harm (serious events) or potential for harm (incidents). Long-term care facilities report infections into the Pennsylva- nia Patient Safety Reporting System (PA-PSRS), as outlined by Pennsylvania Act 52 of 2007. The PSA analyzes those reports to prevent recurrence—either by identifying trends un- apparent to a single facility or flagging a single event that has a high likelihood of recurrence— and disseminates that information through multiple channels. OOd | OOO;}OoO OOoO;}OoO Acute Care Long-Term Care JN. | PA}, Seri Event Infecti ertous Even S A nfections PA-PSRS | Patient & Provider Education e Peer-Reviewed Journal e Toolkits & Resources Consultations e Collaboratives e Safety Alerts ¢ Founded in 2002 by the Medical Care Availability and Reduction of Error Act (commonly referred to as “Act 13” or “the MCARE Act”) « Vision: Safe healthcare for all patients * PA-PSRS is one of the largest patient safety databases in the world, with more than 4 million event reports * Governed by an 11-member board appointed by the governor and Pennsylvania legislature Definitions ABORTION FACILITY Act 30 of 2006 extended the reporting requirements in the Medical Care Avail- ability and Reduction of Error (MCARE) Act to abortion facilities that perform more than 100 procedures per year. At the end of 2021, Pennsylvania had 17 qualifying abortion facilities. ADVERSE EVENT This term is commonly used when discussing patient safety, but itis not defined in the MCARE Act. The Institute of Medicine Committee on Data Standards for Patient Safety defines an adverse event as “an event that results in unintended harm to the patient by an act of commission or omission rather than by the un- derlying disease or condition of the patient.” The PSA considers this term to be broader than “medical error,’ because some adverse events may result from clinical care without necessarily involving an error. And not all adverse events are preventable. Although PA-PSRS includes reports of events that resulted from errors, the PSA's focus is on the broader scope of actual and potential adverse events, not only those that result from errors. AMBULATORY SURGICAL FACILITY The Health Care Facilities Act (HCFA) defines an ambulatory surgical facility (ASF) as “a facility or portion thereof not located upon the premises of a hospital which provides specialty or multispecialty outpatient surgical treatment. “ASF does not include individual or group practice offices of private physicians or dentists, unless such offices have a distinct part used solely for outpatient treatment on a regular and organized basis. ... Outpatient surgical treatment means surgical treatment to patients who do not require hospitalization but who require constant medical supervision following the surgical procedure per- formed.’ At the end of 2021, there were 335 qualifying ASFs in Pennsylvania. ANALYST The analyst is a member of the PSA with education and experience in medicine, nursing, pharmacy, product engineering, statistical analysis, and/or risk man- agement. Analysts review events submitted through PA-PSRS and compose the majority of the articles included in the PSA’s quarterly, peer-reviewed journal, Patient Safety. BIRTHING CENTER The HCFA defines a birthing center as “a facility not part of a hospital which provides maternity care to childbearing families not requiring hospitalization. A birth[ing] center provides a homelike atmosphere for maternity care, including prenatal labor, delivery, and postpartum care related to medically uncomplicated pregnancies.’ Atthe end of 2021, Pennsylvania had five qualifying birthing centers. HOSPITAL The HCFA defines a hospital as “an institution having an organized medical staff established for the purpose of providing to inpatients, by or under the supervision of physicians, diagnostic and therapeutic services for the care of persons who are injured, disabled, pregnant, diseased, sick, or mentally ill, or rehabilitation services for the rehabilitation of persons who are injured, dis- abled, pregnant, diseased, sick, or mentally ill. The term includes facilities for the diagnosis and treatment of disorders within the scope of specific medical specialties, but not facilities caring exclusively for the mentally ill.” At the end of 2021, Pennsylvania had 223 qualifying hospitals. INCIDENT A “potential adverse event”: An event which either did not reach the patient (“near miss”) or did reach the patient but the level of harm did not require additional healthcare services. The legal definition from the MCARE Act: “an event, occurrence, or situation involving the clinical care of a patient in a medi- cal facility which could have injured the patient but did not either cause an un- anticipated injury or require the delivery of additional healthcare services to the patient. The term does not include a serious event.’ INFRASTRUCTURE FAILURE A potential patient safety event associated with the physical plant of a health- care facility, the availability of clinical services, or criminal activity. The legal definition from the MCARE Act: “an undesirable or unintended event, oc- currence, or situation involving the infrastructure of a medical facility or the discontinuation or significant disruption of a service which could seriously compromise patient safety.” Infrastructure failures are submitted only to the Pennsylvania Department of Health (DOH) and are not addressed in this report. 5 MEDICAL ERROR A “preventable adverse event”: This term is commonly used when discussing patient safety, but it is not defined in the MCARE Act. The word “error” appears in PA-PSRS and in this report. For example, one category of reports discussed is “medication errors.’ The Institute of Medicine Committee on Data Standards for Patient Safety defines an error as the “failure of a planned action to be com- pleted as intended (i.e., error of execution) or the use of a wrong plan to achieve an aim (i.e., error of planning). It also includes failure of an unplanned action that should have been completed (omission).” Within the MCARE Act, the term “medical error” is used in section 102: “Ev- ery effort must be made to reduce and eliminate medical errors by identifying problems and implementing solutions that promote patient safety.” It is also used in defining the scope of chapter 3, “Patient Safety”: “This chapter relates to the reduction of medical errors for the purpose of ensuring patient safety.” NURSING HOME Act 52 of 2007 revised the MCARE Act to require nursing homes to report healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) to the PSA. Specifically, the act states that “the occurrence of a healthcare-associated infection in a healthcare facil- ity shall be deemed a serious event as defined in section 302.” Reporting from these facilities began in June 2009. For this report, Pennsylvania had 698 qual- ifying nursing homes at the end of 2021. OTHER EVENT TYPE The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) requires hospitals to report to DOH any death of patients in restraints or in seclusion, or in which restraints or seclusion were used within 24 hours of death (other than soft wrist restraints). Deaths in which the restraints or seclusion are suspected of or confirmed as having played a role in the death should be reported as serious events. Other deaths in which the restraint or seclusion use was incidental or not suspected should be reported under this “Other” category. Reports of serious events and incidents are submitted to the PSA for the pur- poses of learning how the healthcare system can be made safer in Pennsyl- vania. Reports of serious events and infrastructure failures are submitted to DOH so it can fulfill its role as a regulator of Pennsylvania healthcare facilities. PATIENT SAFETY EVENT Anevent, occurrence, or condition that could have resulted ordidresultin harm to a patient and can be but is not necessarily the result of a defective system or process design, a system breakdown, equipment failure, or human error. They can also include adverse events, no-harm events, near misses, and hazardous conditions. PATIENT SAFETY LIAISON The patient safety liaison (PSL) is a unique resource to Pennsylvania MCARE facilities. Serving as the face of the PSA, the PSL provides education and con- sultation to MCARE facilities and ensures that facilities are aware of the re- sources available to them through the PSA, such as educational toolkits, pre- sentations, and webinars. The program has eight liaisons located regionally throughout Pennsylvania. PATIENT SAFETY OFFICER The MCARE Act requires each medical facility to designate someone to serve as that facility's patient safety officer (PSO). In addition to other duties, the MCARE Act requires the PSO to submit reports to the PSA. SERIOUS EVENT The legal definition from the MCARE Act: “an event, occurrence, or situation involving the clinical care of a patient in a medical facility that results in death or compromises patient safety and results in an unanticipated injury requiring the delivery of additional healthcare services to the patient. The term does not include an incident.’ STANDARDIZATION Twenty-eight guiding principles went into effect on April 1, 2015, to improve consistency in event reporting through PA-PSRS. The guidance was developed to help provide consistent standards to acute healthcare facilities in Pennsyl- vania in determining whether occurrences within facilities meet the statutory definitions of serious events, incidents, and infrastructure failures as defined in section 302 of the MCARE Act. The PSA, DOH, and healthcare facility staffs have worked together toward a shared understanding of the requirements. The reporting guidelines were identified based on frequently asked questions (FAQs), controversies, and in- consistencies that were evident in the data collected by the PSA and DOH. 6 Executive Summary The PSA provides numerous training and education programs to facilities, including programs related to reporting, investigating, and analyzing patient safety events; risk assessment; and patient safety-specific education. In 2021 and throughout the pandemic, the PSA's Outreach & Education patient safety liaisons and infection preventionists continued to provide expert patient safety support and education to the commonwealth’s 1,200 licensed MCARE facilities. Also in 2021, the Outreach team released the initial modules of the PSA’s new online patient safety Learning Management System (LMS). Additionally in 2021, the PSA continued publication of its award-winning, peer-reviewed quarterly journal, Patient Safety, and furthered the mission of the PSA’s Center of Excellence for Improving Diagnosis. These programs are provided at no additional cost to facilities. The PSA continues to expand its services by organizing and maintaining research collabo- rations with reporting facilities and other pa- tient safety-centric organizations. In addition, the PSA offers education and patient safety cur- riculum development, and maintains the PSA speakers bureau. By directly providing clinical guidance, feedback, and educational programs derived from reported patient safety events oc- curring in Pennsylvania, the PSA provides signif- icant and unique value back to the Pennsylva- nia healthcare industry funding this program. Highlights from 2021 include: Lea Anne Gardner was a member of four of the Patient Safety Movement Foundation’s Actionable Patient Safety Solutions (APSS) workgroups: Nasogastric Tube Placement and Verification, Social Determinants of Health, Care Coordination, and Health Literacy. Matthew Taylor and Robert Yonash co- developed a poster presentation about wrong-site surgery for the Society for Investigative Dermatology Meeting. Catherine Reynolds and Matthew Taylor presented to the Healthcare Council of Western Pennsylvania Risk/Quality Committee regarding patient safety challenges in the isolation environment. Amy Harper and Elizabeth Kukielka presented at the Pennsylvania Pharmacists Association (PPA) Virtual Mid-Year Conference regarding safety in the medication reconciliation process. Shawn Kepner and Jessica Oaks presented at the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Tableau Day, sharing PSA's implementation of Tableau and highlighting various dashboards created to streamline processes and improve efficiency. * Rebecca Jones served as co-chair of the Society to Improve Diagnosis in Medicine's (SIDM) Practice Improvement Committee and co-led a special interest group session for the SIDM annual conference regarding practice improvement in hospitals and health systems. Robert Yonash was interviewed and featured in the January 2021 Outpatient Surgery Magazine article, “Positioned to Prevent Wrong-Site Surgery.” Patient Safety received three additional awards for publication excellence, including the prestigious Eddie Award for best full issue of a healthcare journal. In conjunction with UPMC-Magee, PSA developed a first-of-its-kind video to educate new parents about preventing infant falls. Susan Wallace and Caitlyn Allen presented about infant falls prevention at the Patient Safety Movement Foundation’s annual conference. Strategic Plan oe Healthcare- Associated Infections Data Surveyed Pennsylvania long-term care (LTC) facilities to ascertain facility involvement with several key infection prevention processes (education of staff, communication, auditing and reporting, transmission- based precautions, emergency preparedness, vaccination, and Act 52). 113 facilities responded to and completed the LTC process measure survey. Starting in March 2021, PSA infection preventionists (IPs) began reaching out to LTC facilities that indicated that they had a new IP at the facility. 433 individuals received an email containing information about IP education, resources, and offers for individualized support. Added new position to support expansion of infection prevention support. Prepared to add new mandatory demographics questions to the Pennsylvania Patient Safety Reporting System (PA- PSRS) on January 1, 2022, including race, ethnicity, sex assigned at birth, gender identity, sexual orientation, and ZIP code. Implemented new rules for PA-PSRS reports to improve data quality, such as expanding character limits and limiting time frames between report submission and certain dates within the report. Began developing algorithmic approaches and automated solutions to identify anomalies and significant trends in PA- PSRS reports. Analyzed and compared data from PA-PSRS and the Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council (PHC4) related to three healthcare-acquired conditions—air embolism, blood incompatibility, and foreign object retained after surgery—and shared a report containing key findings with Pennsylvania healthcare facilities. Improving Diagnosis Culture: CANDOR Collaborative The PSA Center of Excellence for Improving Diagnosis (CoE) team developed version 1.0 of a comprehensive assessment tool to measure organizational maturity across key domains of diagnostic excellence, with plans to pilot the tool with a group of Pennsylvania hospitals in 2022. PSA continued as an active member of the Coalition to Improve Diagnosis—a collaboration of more than 60 leading healthcare organizations convened and led by SIDM—including involvement in drafting and submitting comments regarding the Common Format for reporting diagnostic safety events. PSA hosted an educational webinar presented on behalf of Geisinger Health System and the SaferDx Learning Lab in collaboration with Baylor College of Medicine, aimed at influencing a culture of learning from diagnostic errors at a health system. PSA hosted two webinars in February targeting risk retention groups and facility leadership. They provided an introduction to Communication and Optimal Resolution (CANDOR) and provided an overview of collaborative expectations. Patient safety liaisons communicated directly with facility patient safety teams to discuss and encourage participation in the collaborative. Facilities self-enrolled with a signed statement of intent from senior leadership (to ensure project knowledge and support by senior leadership). A self-assessment provided each facility insight into opportunities for improvement and potential focus for the collaborative work. The goal was to keep the work individualized to facility needs. With 10 issues and more than 100 articles published, Patient Safety is no longer the new kid in town. 2021 marked the third year of the journal’s existence, with highlights including three additional awards in publication excellence, its first international manuscript, from Ireland; and surpassing 50,000 readers worldwide. Patient Safety featured several first-of-their-kind analyses such as an In-depth look at emergence delirium, safety events following a motor vehicle crash, and a statewide assessment of the impact of isolation on patients. DIGITAL EDDIE Healt, BLUE PENCIL! ozZi= AWARDS wats Sa""" Pinot Arey TWO MILLION AMERICANS WILL BE INSURED IN A MOTOR VEHICLE CRASH THIS YEAR. al. PATIENT. SAFETY oe 2021 N02 PATIENTS IN ISOLATION: ‘More than a year into the pandemic, what Sharing Knowledge RUSSIA Patient Safety ge Readers — 2021 a >100 | AM Patient Safetu Annual Achievement Award Winners 129 66 Nominations Facilities Executive Director’s Choice HAI Focus Team at WellSpan Good Samaritan Hospital To decrease the number of central line-associated blood stream infections (CLAB- Sl) and bring Zero Harm back to patient care, WellSpan created a multidisciplinary HAI Focus Team which began process observations at the unit level to identify vari- ations in central line insertion techniques, site selection, daily maintenance, and dressing care, as well as conduct daily assessments of all current central lines for discontinuation opportunities. They also developed appropriate blood culture or- der sets, education for clinicians, and an audit process to ensure coaching was avail- able in real-time. Due to their efforts, WellSpan has been CLABS|I-free for 310 days and has embraced a 28% decrease in overall hospital-acquired infections. Ambulatory Surgical Facility Jesse Hixson, MSN, Greg Purnell, MD, and the AHN-Monroeville Surgery Center Team at Allegheny Health Network — Monroeville Surgery Center In early 2021, surgeons were discussing that they had been experiencing an increased incidence of suture issues after surgery. Jesse Hixson, director of Nursing (DON), met with them and began investigating the suture issues. She expanded the investigation into the broader Allegheny Health Network (AHN) and found that many surgeons in different facilities were having the same problem: some patients just weren’t absorbing the suture while others were developing infections, requiring further surgery. In response to this widespread problem, AHN contracted with another suture company to convert to a different product, and no further incidents were reported after the conversion. Runners-Up ¢ Bethel Park Surgery Center Team — Allegheny Health Network - Bethel Park Surgery Center e Jamie Hallam and Front Office Staff — Spartan Health Surgicenter Improving Diagnosis Joyce Litwak, RN — Lehigh Valley Health Network A patient who was admitted and treated for an isolated hip fracture was to be discharged the following day pending a COVID test result. Joyce Litwak, RN, completed a full assessment and found the patient to have a subtle symptom that could indicate a stroke. Litwak notified the attending, who assessed the patient. A stroke alert was called and subsequent diagnostic scans revealed a severe intraluminal carotid artery (ICA) thrombus. Due to the patient’s inability to receive tissue plasminogen activator (tPA), a “clot buster” drug, without intervention the patient was at high risk of massive and likely fatal stroke. The patient was in the operating room a short time later to remove the ICA clot. Runners-Up e Dr. Jaber Monla-Hassan — Einstein Medical Center Montgomery e Dixon Foundation Health Center Team: Anila Gidwani, Rebecca Topping, Bethany Dieffenderfer — WellSpan Dixon Foundation Health Center Individual Impact Kristin Keane, RN, Short Procedure Unit — Phoenixville Hospital Kristin Keane had a patient going home with multiple drains. She brought a family member back to educate them on emptying the drains and discharge instructions. The family member stated they pass out at the sight of blood and could not do it, and the patient was unable to do it herself. Keane devised a plan to use the patient's cell- phone to FaceTime another relative who could help with the drains. She demonstrat- ed and explained exactly what she was doing and recorded the video as a reference. Keane called the patient the next day to check on them and how their caregiver was doing with the drain process. The family member was using her video as a reference. Runners-Up e Theresa Lasko, RN & Deborah Gruntz, RN, Welcome Center Senior Teammates — Advanced Surgical Hospital e Adrienne Bellino-Ailinger, RN — Einstein Medical Center Montgomery - Einstein Endoscopy Center Blue Bell 11 Long-Term Care Facility Desiree Schuler, LPN, Restorative Nurse — Hometown Nursing & Rehabilitation Center Desiree Schuler is a great safety champion who consistently makes herself available to provide staff education, even on off-shifts. When it comes to resident safety, she solicits feedback from staff and serves as a role model for her peers by wearing her critical thinking cap. Doing the “deeper dive” related to the prevention of all inci- dents and accidents is the norm for her. With Schuler’s leadership, falls in the facility were reduced by 25% this year compared to last—an awesome accomplishment. Runners-Up e Alicia Elvidge, NHA, Chief Executive Officer — South Mountain Restoration Center e Kimberly Krall — Thornwald Home Nationwide Warriors Perioperative Surgery — Northwell Health Based on literature on the effectiveness of safety checklists on surgery outcomes and the potential for video recording to promote surgical quality improvement and patient safety, the team implemented remote video auditing in operating rooms. By providing nonpunitive feedback to surgical teams in real-time, they saw a dramat- ic increase in compliance with the sign-in, time-out, and sign-out elements of the World Health Organization (WHO) surgical safety checklist. Runners-Up ¢ The Second Victim Committee — VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System ¢ Rinisha Thomas, RN & Tatiana Ziegler, RN — Delaware Valley Veterans Home Physician Offices Melissa Bauman, CRNP — Lehigh Valley Physician Group Family Medicine-Bath During a routine physical of a 33-year-old patient, Melissa Bauman heard a heart murmur. The patient had no medical history but the patient's father had died sud- denly in his 60s of an unknown cause. Though the patient had no other symptoms, Bauman insisted that the patient get a 2D echocardiogram, which indicated a possi- ble aortic dissection and led to an emergency chest scan that confirmed the diagno- sis. The patient was admitted and underwent surgery and has been doing well. The cardiologist credits Bauman with saving the patient's life. Runners-Up ¢ Tammy Bowman, Office Coordinator, LVPG Hematology/Oncology Office — Lehigh Valley Physician Group e Outpatient Falls Prevention Team — Einstein Medical Center Montgomery Safety Story Registered Nurses on 5 Cathcart/Schiedt (Med-Surg Unit) — Pennsylvania Hospital The registered nurses on 5 Cathcart/Schiedt raised their concerns about the pos- sible lack of safety and security in dispensing oral liquid methadone from the phar- macy to the unit, which resulted in a hospitalwide shift to storing the drug in the unit-based medication dispensing machine. The change allowed the RNs to remove the methadone when the patient was ready for it and enabled accurate tracking of syringe removal and wasting as with other controlled substances on the unit. Runners-Up « The PAR (Patient At Risk) Bundle Team — Pennsylvania Hospital ¢ Monitor Technician Department — UPMC Community Osteopathic Sepsis Emergency Department Team, Dr. Christopher Stromski & and Ryan Kloss — St. Luke's Allentown St. Luke’s Allentown’s emergency department team has consistently achieved high sepsis bundle compliance by engaging in process improvement, reviewing opportunities, and providing timely assessment and intervention in the sepsis patient population. The leadership team engages in monthly review of internal performance, and shares the great discussion with their team. Runners-Up ¢ WellSpan Health Sepsis Team — WellSpan Health ¢ Dr. Jaber Monla-Hassan, Dr. Robert Czincila, Kim Mikula, Kim Vitelli, Olivia Johnson, Scott Urbinati — Einstein Medical Center Montgomery Time-Outs The Pre-Procedure Time-Out Taskforce — Pennsylvania Hospital In response to a troubling increase in safety event reports related to surgical consent, Pennsylvania Hospital's perioperative leadership created a taskforce to reduce the number of safety events occurring prior to patients’ arrival in the OR. The Pre-Procedure Time-Out process the team designed and implemented ultimately reduced consent and wrong-site/wrong-patient safety events per day by over 87%. Runners-Up e Radiology Department — Chester County Hospital e The Allegheny Health Network Perioperative Education Team — Allegheny Health Network Transparency and Safety in Healthcare Nursing Leadership and Education, Physicians, Epic Team, Patient Safety, and Library Staff — UPMC Carlisle and Central Pennsylvania Hospitals In response to an adverse event related to continuous urinary bladder irrigation, a multidisciplinary team at UPMC Central Pennsylvania hospitals—including nursing leadership, nursing education, urology physicians, ED physicians, hospitalists, Epic Team, Patient Safety Department, and library representatives—created and implemented a continuous urinary bladder irrigation order set and nursing education. These were implemented at all UPMC hospitals in the region, and the event was discussed in forums and shared in a patient safety newsletter to show how transparency and collaboration can result in system improvement for patient safety. Runners-Up ¢ Central Sterile Processing Department — UPMC Hamot e Rosanna Catania-Venuto, MSN, RN — Chester County Hospital 12 The COVID-19 pandemic continued to have a profound ef- fect on long-term care facilities throughout 2021. The most noted impacts included supply issues, staffing shortages, and high rates of turnover. PSA infection preventionists interviewed staff at all 14 Pennsylvania critical access hospitals (CAH). Sessions were held virtually and structured to identify areas of opportuni- ty at individual hospitals, as well as within the CAH cohort. Several opportunities were identified, and this project will continue in 2022. In April 2021, PSA launched our new Learning Manage- ment System (LMS), which is free to access and offers Pennsylvania nursing credits on applicable courses. There were 148 completions in 2021 across the nine available courses: three general patient safety topics, five Patient Safety journal articles, and one based on a PSA webinar. The 2021 PSO Engagement Roundtable discussions are quarterly virtual networking opportunities for Pennsylva- nia healthcare facilities. These sessions focused on the four topics below, with 298 total participants in attendance: ¢ COVID-19 and the Implications of Care e Together Towards Tomorrow: Sharing Stores About Ongoing Challenges During COVID-19 and Lessons Learned About the Importance of Self-Care e Mining Data for Insights: A Look Beneath the Surface of PA-PSRS e Fall Prevention Evidence-Based Best Practices and Targeted Interventions Infant Falls a Pediatric falls result in 2.8 million lhe Emergency Department visits per year iC Mca elm sa Carel UTR m tay Annually across the U.S., there are (Lee A Oh Camel a CANCE NRO MCS The #1 risk is a caretaker who falls asleep om sy Gz} while holding them, often during feeding Tt @ = Sleep when the baby sleeps, even for short periods UPMC | MAGEE-WoMENS WES of time & ask visitors to leave so you can nap According to the Centers for Disease Control and Preven- tion, pediatric falls result in about 8,000 emergency room visits every day and account for 50% of nonfatal injuries in infants. All infants are at risk for falls, and the number one risk factor is a tired parent—and what new parent isn’t exhausted all the time? The good news is that infant falls are preventable. In collaboration with UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital, PSA developed a parent-focused campaign to raise awareness about newborn falls. This included multiple media stories and a video outlining prevention strategies. PSA, in conjunction with local pediatric experts, also developed a prevention video for older infants and toddlers. 14 Data Science & Research Now more than ever the healthcare community needs support, and the goal of the Data Science & Research (DS&R) team is to assist facilities by analyzing important patient safety trends and providing resources that aid in addressing these issues. The DS&R team analyzes event report data entered by healthcare facilities in the Pennsylvania Patient Safety Reporting System (PA-PSRS) and synthesizes these findings with literature and expert knowledge to bring awareness and share potential safety strategies through publications in Patient Safety, courses in PSA's Learning Management System, and webinars. Data drives the DS&R team in providing the most relevant and meaningful content for facilities. To achieve this, itis important to have comprehensive, high-quality data. In 2021, the team made several efforts to improve data quality, while concurrently making internal data consumption easier. The DS&R and O&E teams worked together to create a PA-PSRS Tip Sheet for facilities to help ensure data is consistently entered in event reports. Another project included a data cleanup initiative to provide clarity and consistency to analysts when using the PA-PSRS data for their analyses. Alongside this work, Tableau data visualization dashboards and Python programming were developed to enhance data delivery for the team, providing automated alerts and insights with telemetry events, high harm events, and anomaly detection. As the team looks forward, the goal is to continue streamlining and simplifying PA-PSRS to make the data entry and output as efficient and effective as possible. PSA's vision—safe healthcare for all patients—cannot be fulfilled without evaluating and addressing disparities. Being inclusive and identifying important patient safety issues affecting specific populations are essential. During 2021, the DS&R team prepared to add new mandatory demographics questions to PA-PSRS on January 1, 2022, including race, ethnicity, sex assigned at birth, gender identity, sexual orientation, and ZIP code. PSA and its contractor Gainwell worked with facilities and patient safety software vendors to plan for these updates. In 2021, PSA continued to work with its contractor MedStar Health Research Institute (MHRI). The MHRI team encompasses a wide range of expertise, with many specializing in human factors research. All Region Reports North Central 20,238 Northeast 27,061 Northwest 22,803 South Central 48,618 Southeast 99,753 Southwest 70,409 Total 288,882 Incidents 19,337 25,964 22,139 46,901 97,056 68,443 279,840 Serious Events 901 1,097 664 1,717 2,697 1,966 9,042 15 Fiscal Statements and Contracts The Medical Care Availability and Reduction of Error (MCARE) Act? establishes the Patient Safety Trust Fund as a separate account in the Pennsylvania Treasury. Under the MCARE Act, the Patient Safety Authority (PSA) determines how those funds are used to effectuate the patient safety provisions of the MCARE Act and administers funds in the Patient Safety Trust Fund. Funds come primarily from assessment surcharges collected by the Pennsylvania Department of Health (DOH) from licensed MCARE medical facilities. Pennsylvania hospitals, ambulatory surgical facilities, abortion facil- ities, birthing centers, and nursing homes bear the financial respon- sibility for funding the MCARE mandatory reporting program. Ac- cordingly, the PSA has focused on two fiscal goals: (1) to be prudent in the use of moneys contributed by the healthcare industry, and (2) to assure that healthcare facilities paying for the Pennsylvania Patient Safety Reporting System (PA-PSRS) receive in return direct benefits from PA-PSRS and other PSA programs. Pursuant to Section 304(A) (4) of the MCARE Act, as a general rule, the PSA is authorized to re- ceive funds from any source consistent with the PSA's purposes under the Act. Consistent with this mandate, the PSA at times contracts with and receives funding from other healthcare-related entities to reduce medical errors and promote patient safety in the commonwealth. In 2021, the PSA received no contract funding additional to MCARE As- sessments. Within the design of PA-PSRS, the PSA includes a variety of integral and analytical tools that provide immediate, real-time feedback to facilities on each facility's own adverse event and near-miss reports and activities. Additionally, in 2021, the PSA continued to enhance its newly designed public website patientsafety.pa.gov, providing expanded access to the PSA's educational materials and programs, as wellas mobile accessibility. The PSA continued its PA-PSRS Application Modernization (AMOD), with both functional and design upgrades in 2021. The AMOD project entailed a complete redesign of the PA- PSRS application in 2019. Funding Received From Hospitals, Ambulatory Surgical Facilities, Birthing Centers, and Abortion Facilities The MCARE Act? set an initial limit of $5 million on the total aggregate assessment to acute care facilities in the first year of the MCARE Act beginning in 2002, with an annual increase based on the consumer price index (CPI) in each subsequent year. For fiscal year 2021- 2022 (FY21-22), the maximum allowable acute care assessment is $8,203,696, against the PSA’s Board-approved aggregate acute care assessment of $6,360,000. On December 9, 2021, the PSA Board authorized a recommendation to the DOH for FY21-22 acute care assessment surcharges totaling $6.36 million. The FY21-22 acute care assessment maintains the prior fiscal year’s acute care assessment total, and is 22.5% less than the maximum allowable acute care assessment that could be assessed pursuant to Section 305(d) of the MCARE Act. The PSA utilizes the Northeast medical care services consumer price index (CPI) to calculate maximum allowable assessments. In making the FY21-22 acute care assessment recommendation, the PSA Board considered several points, including the following: e The PSA's FY21-22 budget totals $7.5 million. Of this amount, approximately $6.346 million is budgeted for acute care related expenditures and funded by the $6.36 million in FY21-22 acute care assessments. The acute care assessments also fund certain infection prevention activities within the acute care facilities; these are separate and apart from Act 52 nursing home HAI assessment-funded activities. 16 e The PSA's FY21-22 budget of $7.5 million is a $125 thousand increase over the FY20-21 budget of $7.375 million, and equals the FY19-20 budget of $7.5 million. e The FY21-22 acute care assessment of $6.36 million represents a $1.36 million increase from the PSA's initial FY2002-2003 acute care assessment of $5.0 million, a 1.5% per year average increase. e The FY21-22 assessment levels provide the PSA with liquidity and planning flexibility moving into FY22-23 budget year. Table 1 shows the number of acute care facilities assessed, authorized assessments, and assessment receipts for each fiscal year. Funding Received From Nursing Homes Act 522 of the MCARE Act allows the DOH to assess Pennsylvania nursing homes through license surcharges up to an aggregate amount of $1 million per year for any one year beginning in 2008, plus an annual increase based on the CPI for each subsequent year. In 2008, following the PSA's suggestion, the DOH assessed 725 nursing home facilities a total of $1,000,000 and transferred $1,000,782 to the Patient Safety Trust Fund for FYO8-O9. This money can be spent only on activities related to healthcare-acquired infections (HAI) and the implementation and maintenance of Chapter 4 of the MCARE Act. For FY21-22, the Act 52 maximum allowable assessment is $1,324,445, while the PSA Board’s authorized FY21-22 Act 52 assessment is $1,140,000. On December 9, 2021, the PSA Board authorized a recommendation to the DOH for the FY21-22 nursing home assessment surcharges of $1.14 million. The FY21-22 Act 52 assessment is equal to and maintains the FY20-21 nursing home assessment total, and is 13.9% below the maximum annual amount that could be assessed in the current fiscal-year pursuant to Section 409(b) of the MCARE Act. The PSA utilizes the Northeast medical care services CPI to calculate maximum allowable assessments. Table 1. Acute Care Facility Assessments NUMBER OF TOTAL FACILITIES ASSESSMENTS FISCAL ASSESSED APPROVED RECEIVED YEAR BYDOH? ASSESSMENTS BY DOH® 2002-03 356 $5,000,000 $4,663,000 2003-04 377 $2,500,000 $2,542,316 2004-05 414 $2,500,000 $2,508,787 2005-06 450 $2,500,000 $2,500,149 2006-07 453 $2,500,000 $2,500,034 2007-08 526 $5,400,000 $5,391,583 2008-09 524 $4,000,000 $3,972,677 2009-10 519 $5,000,000 $4,989,781 2010-11 542 $5,000,000 $4,981,443 2011-12 550 $5,100,000 $5,063,723 2012-13 545 $5,500,000 $5,504,549 2013-14 556 $5,500,000 $5,492,002 2014-15 564 $6,200,000 $6,209,459 2015-16 569 $6,500,000 $6,494,845 2016-17 575 $6,675,000 $6,656,359 2017-18 583 $6,860,000 $6,860,164 2018-19 585 $6,860,000 $6,834,611 2019-20 558 $6,360,000 $6,300,845 2020-21 557 $6,360,000 $6,388,4334 2021-22 553 $6,360,000 Total $95,854,760 a. The number of facilities assessed by the DOH differs from the number of the MCARE Act’s facilities cited elsewhere in this report because of differences in the dates chosen to calculate the number of facilities for these two different purposes. b. Amounts assessed and amounts received differ because a few facilities may have closed in the interim or are in bankruptcy. In a few cases, the DOH has pursued action to enforce facility compliance with the MCARE Act’s assessment requirement. Amounts received by DOH are then transferred to the Patient Safety Trust Fund. c. FY2019-20 Acute Care Assessment receipts include $66,301.70 transferred to Patient Safety Trust Fund in calendar year (CY) 2021. d. FY2019-20 Acute Care Assessment receipts include $15,737.27 transferred to Patient Safety Trust Fund in CY2022. e. 2020-21 missing figures were unavailable at the time of publication and will appear in next year’s annual report. 17 Table 2 shows the number nursing homes assessed, approved Table 3a. 2021 Expenditures assessments, and assessments amounts received for each fiscal year. CONTROL LEVEL AMOUNT Annual Expenditures and Non-Assessment Revenue Receipts 61: Personnel $4,698,444 63: Operating $2,231,251 During calendar year 2021 (CY2021), the PSA spent about $6,929,695 million (Table 3a). The PSA received no contract- or service-related receipts in 2021, and received investment income of $6,715 (Table 3b). Total 2021 Expenditures $6,929,695 Table 3b. 2021 Revenue Receipts Patient Safety Authority Contracts REVENUE RECEIPTS AMOUNT The MCARE Act requires the PSA to identify a list of contracts entered into pursuant to the Act, including the amounts awarded to each Acute Care Assessments $6,438,998 contractor. Nursing Home Assessments $1,139,038 Non-Assessment Revenue $0 Investment Income $6,715 ; Total 2021 Revenue Receipts $7,584,751 Table 2. Nursing Home Assessments NUMBER OF TOTAL . . . . FACILITIES ASSESSMENTS During CY2021, the PSA received services under the following FISCAL ASSESSED APPROVED RECEIVED contracts (FC or funds commitment; PO or purchase order): YEAR BYDOH ASSESSMENTS BY DOH Gainwell Technologies, LLC 2008-09 725 1,000,000 1,000,782 . : 5009-10 m4 § $800,000 $ $799,389 (previously DXC Technology Services, LLC and DXC MS, LLC) 2010-11 707 $800,000 $799,829 FC # 4000022708 2011-12 707 $800,000 $804,473 e Five-year contract (including two option years) for Pennsylvania sole tt roa toy ene Patient Safety Reporting System (PA-PSRS) software development nO1A_15 503 er oscooo stoasnan and maintenance, and other IT services. DXC MS, LLC spun off from 5015-16 509 $1,080,000 $1,079,505 DXC Technology Services, LLC in 2020 as the result of a merger and 5016-17 704 $1,111,000 $1,110185 assignment of the contract. On October 1, 2020, DXC MS LLC became 5017-18 699 $1,140,000 $1,139,483 a wholly owned subsidiary of the newly formed Gainwell Technologies, 2019-20 695 $1,140,000 $1,137,933 and invoiced as Gainwell Technologies, LLC (Gainwell). On September 2020-21 693 $1,140,000 $1,139,038 23, 2021, the PSA Board authorized extending the Gainwell contract 2021-228 681 $1,140,000 through the two option years (through June 30, 2024). Total $13,112,163 e July 1, 2019, through June 30, 2024 e Total Contract Amount: $7,071,540 over 5 years a. F¥Y2021-22 missing figures were unavailable at the time of publication and will appear in next year’s annual report. e Amount invoiced for 2021 (12 months, Jan-Dec): $1,221,652 18 MedStar Health Research Institute, FC # 4000022717 e Five-year contract (including two option years) for analyzing and evaluating patient safety data. On September 23, 2021, the PSA Board authorized extending the MHRI contract through the two option years (through June 30, 2024). e July 1, 2019 through June 30, 2024 ¢ Total Contract Amount: $3,419,185.85 over 5 years e Amount invoiced for 2021 (12 months, Jan-Dec): $492,077 Ricoh USA, Inc. e Ricoh Color MFD lease, PO # 4500841111 e September 1, 2017, to August 31, 2021 @ $328.17/month e 12-month Ricoh lease expense JIan—Dec) paid in 2021: $2,625.36 Xerox Corp. e Xerox color MFD lease, PO # 4600015253 e October 1, 2017, to September 30, 2021 @ $315.41/month e 12-month Xerox lease expense Jan-Dec) paid in 2021: $2,838.69 Patient Safety Authority Balance Sheet Table 4 reflects the status of the Patient Safety Trust Fund as of December 31, 2021. Source: Office of Comptroller Operations, Commonwealth Bureau of Accounting and Financial Management. CY21 methodology includes an accrual of Board-approved FY21-20 Assessment Revenue. Table 4. Patient Safety Trust Balance Sheet ASSETS Temporary Investments $9,070,708 Receivables, net: Assessment Revenue 7,500,000 TOTAL ASSETS $16,570,708 LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCE Accounts Payable and Accrued Liabilities $69,467 Invoices Payable 305,086 TOTAL LIABILITIES 374,553 Deferred Assessment Revenue 7,500,000 TOTAL DEFERRED INFLOW OF RESOURCES = 7,500,000 Restricted 8,696,155 TOTAL FUND BALANCE 8,696,155 TOTAL LIABILITIES, DEFERRED INFLOW OF RESOURCES, AND FUND BALANCE $16,570,708 NOTES 1. Medical Care Availability and Reduction of Error (MCARE) Act of March 20, 2002, P.L. 154, No 13 40. Available: http:/www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/legis/li/uconsCheck. cfm?yr=2002&sessind=O&act=13. 2. Medical Care Availability and Reduction of Error (MCARE) Act - Reduction and Prevention of Health Care-Associated Infection and Long-Term Care Nursing Facilities Act of July 20, 2007, P.L. 331, No.52, Cl.40. http:/www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/legis/li/uconsCheck. cfm?yr=2007&sessind=O&act=52. Anonymous Reports/Referrals to DO Anonymous Reports The MCARE Act allows healthcare workers to submit an “anonymous report.’ Under the provision, a healthcare worker who has complied with section 308(a) of the Act may file an anonymous report regarding a serious event. The form is available on the PSA's website and through PA-PSRS. The PSA developed an “anonymous reporting” guide to ensure healthcare workers are aware of their option to submit an anonymous report and encourages them to do so when they believe their facility is not appropriately reporting or responding to a serious event. Patient safety liaisons also review the anonymous reporting process with new patient safety officers as part of their onboarding program. Individuals completing the form do not need to identify themselves, and the PSA assigns professional clinical staff to conduct any subsequent investigations. In 2021, the PSA received one anonymous report that complied with MCARE Act requirements. Referrals to Licensure Boards The MCARE Act requires that the PSA identify referrals to licensure boards for failure to submit reports under the Act’s reporting re- quirements. MCARE specifies that it is the medical facility’s respon- sibility to notify the licensee's licensing board of failure to report. No such situations were reported to the PSA last year. However, the PSA is unlikely to receive information related to a referral to licensure board because PA-PSRS reports do not include the names of individual licensed practitioners. Anonymous Reports (2004-2021) 2004 200! 2007. 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 «= 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 20 Thank you to the members of our Healthcare- Associated Infection Advisory Panel and Patient Pa Ne S Advisory Panel for your service and expertise! Kenneth J. Brubaker, MD Dory Frain at . Susan E. Coffin, MD, MPH 2 Jennifer Hamm RN i lea Bettina Dixon, DNP, CRNA ea Deolee tral Patricia Hennessey, MSN, RN 3 Dwight D. McKay James Hollingsworth, MSN, RN re a Iolo er- Tuoi Darryl Jackson, MD & Cindy Sidrane Tricia Kradel, PhD, MPH & Lucas Wickard Chris Marshall, PharmD, MBA David A. Nace, MD, MPH David Pegues, MD Molly Quesenberry, BSN, RN Jason Raines, MPA, MBA Emily G. Shears, MPH Paige Van Wirth, MD Shane Walker Hope Waltenbaugh, MSN, RN Mohamed H. Yassin, MD, PhD Kelly Zabriskie, MLS, BS Healthcare-Associated Infection Advisory oc patientsafety.pa.gov ae eal! P f.\ Safety PUL dated gi a7