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Kaiser South San Francisco RNs don yellow sashes to reduce ......

Submitted by admin on Mon, 2008-07-14 10:22.

Adult Clinical Services Director Becky Richards, RN, BSN, MA, did not intend to spawn a fashion revolution when she first began searching the internet in 2006 for brightly colored vests for her staff at Kaiser South San Francisco Medical Center to wear while dispensing medication. But with the impressive effect the “non-interruption” wear has had on reducing medication administration errors and the time dispensing meds, yellow sashes and vests just may become as common accouterments to modern nurses' attire as caps were a century ago.

Nurses don the brightly colored garments emblazoned with “Caution: Medication Administration in Progress” to signal to others that they are dispensing medication and should not be distracted. The idea evolved from a quality forum at Kaiser South San Francisco, where front-line nurses, risk management, and patient safety staff, as well as quality improvement personnel, brainstormed on how to improve the medication administration process.

The staff felt it could reduce its already low rate of errors by somehow minimizing interruptions. “We think our error rate is really very good — it's less than one-half of one percent — but we felt that any one medication error is one too many,” Richards says. The staff administers about 22,000 doses of medication each month.

In researching the project, Richards came across the work of Tess Pape, RN, PhD, CNOR, who had pioneered the idea of having nurses wear a vest or sash as non-interruption wear a few years earlier. Richards also discovered that staff at Kaiser's Sidney R. Garfield Health Care Innovation Center were in the midst of developing a process to decrease distraction during medication administration as well, and collaborated with the staff members on honing the overall protocol.

Kaiser incorporated wearing a yellow vest or sash into its standardized medication administration protocol, dubbed KP MedRite. The process requires nurses to don the sash, check the medication administration record using the five “rights” (the right medication at the right time for the right patient at the right dose by the right route), wash their hands, get the proper medication, turn down the TV or radio in the patient's room, turn up the lights, double-check the patient's identity, discuss the medications with the patient, administer the medication, document the delivery, and wash their hands again before removing the sash.

When first implemented, the flashy attire caused distractions rather than averted them, as curious staff and patients repeatedly interrupted nurses to ask why they were wearing the unusual apparel. And the nurses were not thrilled about wearing the orange construction vests used originally.

“We were going to abandon the pilot, but what we found at the end of 2006 was for that five- to six-month period of time on those two units, we had a 47% decrease in medication errors just from implementing the pilot on those two units,” Richards says.

So Kaiser modified the attire, improved communication throughout the hospital to inform everyone not to interrupt nurses wearing the yellow sash or vest, and implemented the system throughout the hospital in April 2007. (Because of workflow issues in the ED and recovery rooms, the system will not be used in those settings until later this summer.) One other unit declined to participate, citing its minimal error stats. After 30 days, errors had decreased in every unit, averaging a 20% reduction and convincing the reluctant unit — which had no reduction that month — to adopt the protocol and non-interruption wear.

The hospital's results with the KP MedRite and non-interruption wear have been replicated at other Kaiser facilities. Kaiser reports an overall 50% reduction in the number of staff interruptions, a 50% increase in the standardization of medication administration, a 15% improvement in the time required to pass medications, and an 18% increase in on-time medication delivery. Kaiser is now gathering data on error-reduction as well. The Joint Commission is considering the KP MedRite procedure as a best practice for hospitals across the country.

Melody Navarro, RN, MSN, a charge nurse in the med/surg oncology unit at Kaiser West Los Angeles Medical Center, has noticed a culture shift since her facility implemented the KP MedRite process on a pilot basis. She was part of the group of nurses and innovators at the Garfield Center that helped develop the new protocol.

Patients have been positive about the change, and have been pleased to have the nurse discuss their medications without interruption. Other disciplines now respect the non-interruption wear. Richards adds that some healthcare professionals, such as physicians and pharmacists, are even looking into establishing some non-interruption protocols themselves.

Anne Federwisch is a freelance writer. To comment, e-mail editorCA@nurseweek.com .

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