WIHI - A Podcast from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement
Health & Fitness:Medicine
Date: January 24, 2013
Featuring:
Developing an infection can be complicated enough, but when the body's immune system reacts by going into overdrive in the form of sepsis, every second counts. The diagnosis needs to be swift and, if sepsis is confirmed, interventions in the form of fluids and antibiotics must be administered immediately. Because the global death rate from sepsis remains painfully high — tens of millions each year — stepped-up efforts to reduce mortality have been underway on a global scale for at least the past decade. And there is progress to report on multiple continents where many health care organizations have been working hard on sepsis, often as part of international initiatives such as the Surviving Sepsis Campaign and in concert with professional societies such as the Society of Critical Care Medicine.
In the US, where 25 percent of the 750,000 people who develop sepsis each year die, North Shore–Long Island Jewish (NSLIJ) Health System has reduced its sepsis mortality rate significantly. North Shore–LIJ is now in the midst of a strategic partnership with IHI to maintain and further these gains, and key learning has begun to emerge. WIHI host Madge Kaplan explores this progress on reducing deaths from sepsis with three clinical leads from North Shore–LIJ and two improvement leaders from IHI. Early detection and intervention are key, but in order to execute best practices reliably, changing the culture and engaging the leadership of the organization have proven essential. At North Shore–LIJ, focusing on the emergency department has also been foundational to testing best practices and spreading them to the rest of the hospital system.
Don't miss this very important discussion about a critical problem that everyone in acute care needs to be aware of and working on. Patients and families are getting engaged too.
WIHI: How to Speak Up for Safety
WIHI: Building Systems of Safety
WIHI: Engaging and Supporting Family Caregivers
WIHI: Improving Patient Experience: What's Working, What's Not
WIHI: What's Next for Electronic Health Records
WIHI: How Health Care Can Accelerate Health Equity
WIHI: 100 Million Healthier Lives: From Vision to Reality
WIHI: Five Practical Strategies for Managing Successful Improvement Projects
WIHI: Nurturing Trust: Addiction and Maternal and Newborn Health
WIHI: Health Care in Motion: Making Sense of a Moving Picture
WIHI: Joy in Work: An Antidote to Today's Burnout in Health Care
WIHI: The Opioid Crisis: How Health Care and the Community Can Act
WIHI: Breaking the Rules: Lessons from IHI’s Leadership Alliance
WIHI: The New World of Co-producing Health and Health Care
WIHI: A New Framework for Safety in Ambulatory Care
WIHI: Making Data Work for Quality Improvement
WIHI: Morality Matters: How to Reset the Mission of Quality Improvement
WIHI: New Tools and Thinking for Shared Decision Making
WIHI: Realizing “What Matters” (to Patients and Families)
WIHI: Personal Mastery for Transformational Leadership
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Good Nurse Bad Nurse
The Relaxback UK Show
On Call With Dr. Anselm Anyoha
The Peter Attia Drive
RFK Jr Podcast