For seven years, Patient Safety First (PSF) has provided
hospital staff with an opportunity come together, learn from each other, and
share success stories and best practices all in the name of providing safe,
quality care to patients that step through the doors of their hospitals. As a
statewide collaborative, PSF has provided over 200 in-person meetings, webinars
and calls to support hospitals’ improvement efforts.
Many times, the faces you see at these regional meetings
change, but there are some that become very familiar. One such face is that of
Donna Young. Donna is Director, Performance Improvement at Chino Valley MedicalCenter. Donna has been an RN for sixty years and attests to seeing a lot of
changes in healthcare during that time. For the past seven years she has
consistently attended PSF meetings in the Southern California region. I had the
opportunity to sit down with Donna and ask her a few questions about her
experience participating in PSF, what effect it has had on her work and why she
makes coming to these meetings a priority.
How has PSF supported quality improvement efforts at
Chino Hospital?
“PSF provides us practical
tools to drive improvement, it also enables us to have good data to present to
our staff and medical board. Our leadership often asks, how does our data
compare with local and national hospital programs? PSF provides a credible
comparison point.I really appreciate the consistency of
the PSF goals and how the program stays relevant to changes in performance
improvement measures and requirements. PSF is a very reliable resource.”
What are some of the practices your hospital has
undertaken to effect positive patient safety changes?
“We focus on safety at every single staff meeting and
understand that building and supporting a culture of safety is paramount to
ensuring we provide the highest quality of care to our patients. We use the Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) survey on patient safety culture to
asses where staff are and we’ve seen great results. Chino Valley Medical Center
recently received three awards recognizing our successes in safety, including
the Truven Top 100 Hospitals, 2015 Women’s Choice Award for Emergency Care and HealthgradesPatient Safety Excellence Award™ Winner 2016. Our involvement with PSF has
helped us both achieve and demonstrate our improvement.”
In your experience what has been the single best
component of PSF and why?
“I like the peer-to-peer learning aspect. Working at a fast
pace in a hospital can sometimes feel isolating. Coming to these meetings and
networking with your peers helps take you out of your routine. You find people
you can talk to about the same issues you might be experiencing. PSF is a
community, so when you are asked to present, you feel comfortable because you
are in front of your peers. It is still a challenge, but a good one that
expands your competencies.”
As we finished our discussion, Donna told me that she
certainly hopes PSF continues for many years. For her, and for many of the
hospitals that participate in the free, statewide collaborative the resources
and information they receive is just as valuable as the networking and social
aspects of the program. PSF truly is a community.
Patient Safety First (PSF) is a groundbreaking
partnership between National Health Foundation, California’s Regional Hospital
Associations, Anthem Blue Cross and over 160 hospitals across the state. The
efforts of Patient Safety First have been recognized by several awards, most
notably the esteemed 2013
John M. Eisenberg Patient Safety and Quality Award from
the National Quality Forum and The Joint Commission, for the demonstrated Phase
1 accomplishments of its first three years (2010-2012).