alarm fatigue for clinical managers

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Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers Kurt Patton MS, RPh Jennifer Cowel, RN, MBA John R. Rosing, MHA, FACHE Patton Healthcare Consulting 1

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Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers. Kurt Patton MS, RPh Jennifer Cowel, RN, MBA John R. Rosing, MHA, FACHE Patton Healthcare Consulting. Alarm Fatigue Focus Issue. A sentinel event alert was released in April ’13 Focus of a new National Patient Safety Goal for 2014 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

Kurt Patton MS, RPhJennifer Cowel, RN, MBA

John R. Rosing, MHA, FACHE

Patton Healthcare Consulting

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John Rosing
Page 2: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

Alarm Fatigue Focus Issue

• A sentinel event alert was released in April ’13• Focus of a new National Patient Safety Goal for

2014• Alarms have led to Immediate Threat– Alarm being shut off or silenced– Not resetting alarm after silenced– Not trained on all equipment– Result in patient death

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Page 3: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

What is Alarm Fatigue?Or Crying Wolf

• Alarm fatigue occurs when clinical personnel fail to respond appropriately to alarms due to inability to understand the critical nature or priority of the alarm. Staff become desensitized after experiencing and handling so many. Alarms are ignored or turned off.

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Page 4: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

Taking a Good Thing Too Far

• Study of alarms in critical care units – Hundreds of alarms per patient per day – thousands of alarms per unit per day.

• Beyond the basics – bed alarms, chair alarms, IV, call button, hand sanitizer.

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Page 5: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

Understanding the Issues

• Between 85% and 99% of ICU alarms are false, or non-critical alarms, don’t need response

• FDA published results of 216 manufacturer reports on monitor related deaths

• TJC analyzed sentinel events for monitor related causes

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Page 6: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

Common Causes• Staff are overwhelmed by the # of alarms• Staff turn-off or turn down alarms• Alarm settings not set appropriately• Alarm default not reset after a patient move• Alarm malfunctions such as not properly

relayed to wireless or paging system or battery• Nurses block out noise to focus on task

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Page 7: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

Causes – Cont.

– Inadequate staff training and sounds are difficult to learn, differentiate which alarm

– Put a “ring” on it - The solution to many problems

– Med Equipment companies create their alarm to fetch attention, the beeping is intended to irritate

– Sounds of alarms do not differentiate a ‘notification’ from a critical event.

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Page 8: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

2013 TJC Sentinel Event Alert

• Combined set of recommendations from TJC, the Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation (AAMI) and ECRI Institute.

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Page 9: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

Sentinel Event AlertRecommendations

①Leaders ensure there is a process for safe alarm management and response in high- risk areas.

② Prepare an inventory of alarm-equipped medical devices and identify the default alarm settings and appropriate alarm limits.

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Page 10: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

Sentinel Event AlertRecommendations

③Establish guidelines for alarm settings. Define when alarms are not clinically necessary

④Establish guidelines for tailoring alarm settings and limits for individual patients (who can modify and when)

⑤Implement routine inspections and maintenance of alarm-equipped devices.

⑥Staff training on above

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Page 11: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

Sentinel Event AlertRecommendations

⑦Adhere to manufacturer instruction for use, eg: replace single use leads, replace batteries

⑧Assess acoustics of alarm sounds⑨Set as a leadership priority⑩Establish a team to address

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Page 12: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

New NPSG on Alarm SafetyNPSG.06.01.01

1 Establish alarm safety as a priority (7/2014)2 Identify the most important alarm signals to

manage (2014)3 Establish policies and procedures for

managing clinical alarms. (1/2016)4 educate staff and LIP’s about the purpose

and proper operation of alarm systems (1/2016)

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Page 13: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

NPSG.06.01.01 EP 3• Policy and Procedure should address:– Clinically appropriate settings for alarm signals– When alarm signals can be disabled– When alarm parameters can be changed – Who has the authority to set alarm parameters – Who can change alarm parameters – Who can turn alarm “off” – Monitoring and responding to alarm signals– Checking individual alarm signals

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Page 14: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

What to do Now• Assign the task to quality committee or safety

committee• Review alarm literature and your own data• Decide which alarms are most important to

manage – OR and PACU alarms likely to be high priority

• Seek leadership approval for priorities/plan• Document your efforts and decisions early

2014

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Page 15: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

Concrete Steps to Improving Safety/Effectiveness of Alarms

• How many alarms are tolerable to staff to avoid fatigue? Anesthesiology Today study suggests 2 – 4 per patient/day

• Reduce Thresholds for alarms, use evidence based approach.– Define when a clinician needs to go to bed side

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Page 16: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

Reducing False Positives

• A Johns Hopkins Study: lower SpO2 alarm from 90& to 88% reduced alarms by more than 50%

• Place delays on alarms, delay alarm by 15 seconds. Journal of Emergency Medicine (JEM) study. Reduced false positives by 80%

• Get to only the alarms staff care about

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Page 17: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

Improving Safety of Alarms

• Equipment maintenance – Reduce low battery alerts by replacement– Deactivate or limit overrides– Routine testing of alarms

• Selection of equipment – Vendors with meaningful alarm sounds – Implement intelligent escalation of alerts– Involve staff in equipment selection

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Page 18: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

Improving Safety of Alarms

• Staff Training– Train staff on meaning of all alarm sounds– Train staff to check patient before silencing

any alarm– Train staff on new equipment – Train staff on proper alarm placement, skin

preparation, ensure competence

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Page 19: Alarm Fatigue for Clinical Managers

Improving Safety of Alarms

• Develop and implement policies• Who can change alarm settings• Who needs to be monitored• What are default settings• Who is responsible for performing clinical alarm

monitoring rounds• Develop audit tool to measure compliance with

established policies• Develop and complete check list at shift change

for patient alarm settings

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