From the Editor
Develop and use a checklist for 3rd- and 4th-degree perineal lacerations
Does your labor unit have such a list? Here, key components to get you started.
Henry M. Lerner, MD, is Assistant Clinical Professor of Obstetrics & Gynecology at Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts. He has been in private practice of obstetrics and gynecology for 35 years, has served on the board of a major medical malpractice carrier for 14 years, and has helped defend more than 300 obstetricians in medical malpractice cases across the country.
Dr. Lerner reports that he is a consultant to The Sullivan Group, a patient safety education provider.
Building a comprehensive obstetric patient safety program for your unit
Obstetricians, obstetric nurses, nurse managers, and obstetric department heads are almost always well-trained, hard working, highly motivated individuals dedicated to providing the best possible care for their patients. Nevertheless, errors in the provision of care are all too common.1–3 Even though these errors are confined to a small percentage of patient interactions, they engender profound consequences: injuries to mothers or their babies, higher costs to treat associated complications, and medical-legal suits that can entangle both clinicians and plaintiffs for years.
Why do such errors occur when it is the goal of well-trained and dedicated practi-tioners to provide error-free care? There are several reasons:
How then can obstetrics professionals seek to eradicate or at least decrease the number of medical errors that occur during the provision of maternity care?
To accomplish this, we must address the core issues at the root of these medical errors. Solutions must be implemented to 1) simplify the often unnecessary complexity of delivering medical care and 2) create systems and tools that minimize errors and catch those that do occur before they can cause harm.
Yet, how is this to be accomplished? In this article, I describe eight tools developed over time by clinicians who have worked in the field of obstetric patient safety. These tools provide some answers and concrete starting points.
TOOL 1: CONTINUING EDUCATION
William Osler once said, “It is astonishing with how little reading a doctor can practice medicine, but it is not astonishing how badly he may do it.”
As the years out of residency and nursing school accumulate, clinicians—both obstetricians and obstetric nurses—find it all too easy to continue to practice pretty much the way they did during training. However, medical science changes, new protocols improve on the old, and new techniques and medications are introduced yearly into the practice arena. If a clinician is to deliver the best possible care, he or she has to keep abreast of these developments in obstetrics and refresh his or her memory from time to time about things learned long ago. Such acquisition of new and review of old obstetric knowledge can be achieved only through ongoing study.
There are many ways continuing education can be accomplished. You can read new editions of textbooks when they are published or follow an obstetric journal through its yearly cycle. Cutting-edge, clinically oriented, interactive courses in all major areas of obstetrics are available to clinicians online. The recertification criteria of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), state licensing requirements, and individual obstetric department recredentialing requirements often mandate such continuing education.
TOOL 2: SIMULATION PROGRAMS
Most obstetric emergencies, especially the most dangerous ones, occur infrequently, making it difficult for the many members of any labor and delivery unit to have their skills sharply honed to best deal with them. This is less of a problem at busy institutions where, simply due to the numbers of patients cared for, such emergencies are encountered on a regular basis. But at smaller facilities they are, fortunately, rare. The only way a unit can maintain its competency to handle such situations when they do arise—and they will—is to practice them in simulation mode.
There is now an increasing amount of literature demonstrating that simulation programs are effective not only at improving the knowledge base of obstetrics providers but also at improving Apgar scores, reducing admissions to neonatal intensive care units (NICUs), and preventing brachial plexus injuries.4
An effective simulation program should contain the following features:
Many institutions have developed simulation training centers. While these can be excellent teaching facilities, something is lost if simulation training is not done on the actual unit where obstetricians and obstetric nurses will encounter emergencies. Simulation programs also should be time-efficient and should be scheduled to make it easy for obstetrics personnel to participate. For greater convenience and knowledge retention, it is better to have short simulation programs at frequent intervals than day-long programs once per year or every other year.
Does your labor unit have such a list? Here, key components to get you started.
Both maternal and perinatal outcomes will improve if you follow these data-driven strategies for managing eclampsia and stabilizing the mother
The widespread use of electronic health records has been hailed as panacea and derided as anathema to quality medical care and medicolegal...
A communication–trust–shared responsibility triad established at the first prenatal visit is your best hedge against allegation of malpractice...
4 problematic L & D cases: Occasions for the authors to talk about keeping clear of charges that you are the cause of injury during birth