News Release

$3 million grant to UIC for patient safety, medical liability project

Grant and Award Announcement

University of Illinois Chicago

The University of Illinois at Chicago's Institute for Patient Safety Excellence has received a $3 million grant to evaluate its comprehensive process for responding to patient harm events at nine other Chicago area hospitals.

The demonstration project, funded by the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services' Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, is part of the patient safety and medical liability initiative announced by President Obama last year.

Few hospitals disclose medical errors to patients when harm occurs. UIC physicians and health care researchers were among the first to devise a detailed process for responding to patient-safety events. That process, known as the Seven Pillars, has been in place at UIC's medical center and its affiliated health clinics since 2006.

The process outlines seven critical elements to improve patient-provider communication, learn from mistakes, and ensure timely and equitable resolution when patients are harmed -- and thereby reduce frivolous lawsuits and medical liability costs.

The Seven Pillars are event reporting, investigation and root cause analysis, communication and disclosure, apology and remediation, patient safety and systems improvements, data tracking and performance evaluation, and education and training.

"Our method puts patients first, and we believe that the best way to get a handle on medical malpractice is by improving patient safety throughout the institution," says Dr. Timothy McDonald, principal investigator of the project and chief safety and risk officer for health affairs at UIC. "It's really a program about changing the culture in hospitals and our relationships with patients."

Even at the safest institutions, patient harm may still occur. Having a process for maintaining communication when harm occurs can be very effective in avoiding unnecessary litigation, McDonald says.

"In the event that inappropriate care has caused harm, it's important to settle those cases in a principled manner, in a reasonable amount of time, where the money goes to compensate the patients and families and not the legal system."

The grant-funded project expands UIC's program to six hospitals in the Resurrection Health Care System, two hospitals within the Vanguard Health system, and Mount Sinai Hospital.

The hospitals will be randomly assigned to phase in the process over a three-year period, allowing researchers to analyze the feasibility and effectiveness of the program in improving patient safety and reducing medical liability.

Researchers will measure the number of adverse event reports, (including near-misses and unsafe conditions), the number of reported significant adverse events, the patient safety culture, the number and quality of disclosures, the number of claims, the time to settle, the cost of malpractice insurance, and the proportion of settlement received by the patient or family.

An evaluation of Seven Pillars within the UIC health system found that, when compared to pre-intervention levels and trends, the process succeeded in increasing the number of adverse event reports submitted to risk management, increasing the number of communication consults offered to patients and families after harm events, increasing the number of peer reviews for clinicians, and decreasing the number of claims made against the health system.

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The demonstration project advisory board includes Dr. Peter Angood of the National Quality Forum; Rosemary Gibson, author of "Wall of Silence"; Helen Haskell, founder of Mothers Against Medical Errors; Dr. Lucian Leape of the Harvard School of Public Health; Jared Loeb, vice president of The Joint Commission; and Becky Steward, director of patient safety for the Illinois Hospital Association. A consumer advisory board will be chaired by Martin Hatlie of Consumers for Advancing Patient Safety.

UIC researchers on the project include Nikki Centomani, director of risk management at the medical center; Dr. David Mayer, associate dean of the College of Medicine and co-director of the Institute for Patient Safety Excellence; Bruce Lambert, professor in the College of Pharmacy; Kelly Smith, research assistant professor in the College of Medicine; Annette Valenta, professor and associate dean of the College of Applied Health Sciences; and Lorens Helmchen, assistant professor in the School of Public Health.

For more information about UIC, visit www.uic.edu


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