The
Michigan
Health and Safety Coalition focuses on how hospitals are improving
patient safety. For each of seven serious medical conditions, they
look at whether the hospital:
- Has measures that assist the physician in identifying when the
procedure is medically necessary and assist staff in regularly reviewing
patient records
- Monitors the health outcomes of patients who undergo the procedure and
considers differences in patients before surgery
- Collects and records in a statewide database the clinical data for
patients who undergo the procedure to help understand how to provide the
best medical care
For some of the medical conditions, the Coalition has additional
guidelines.
For low birthweight infants, it also looks at whether the
hospital:
- Works with a board-certified or board-eligible neonatologist who
directs the neonatal intensive care unit
- Has 24-hour in-house coverage by either a physician qualified in the
intensive care of newborns or by a specially trained physician
extender
- Has physician backup to the physician extender within 30 minutes
For removal of part of the esophagus due to cancer, the Coalition
looks at whether the hospital:
- Works with surgeons who have appropriate training and
qualifications
- Uses a multidisciplinary tumor board which meets regularly to review
and structure care
- Can provide care after surgery, including chemotherapy and radiation
therapy
For infants with congenital anomalies, the Coalition looks at
whether the hospital:
- Works with a board-certified or board-eligible neonatologist who
directs the neonatal intensive care unit
- Has 24-hour in-house coverage provided by either a physician qualified
in the intensive care of newborn infants or by a specially trained
physician extender
- Has physician backup to the physician extender within 30 minutes
- Possesses diagnostic tools such as radiology, ultrasound, MRI imaging
and skilled interpretation of tests for the specific anomaly
- Has appropriate medical, surgical, and pediatric subspecialists
available through established consultation and referral networks to
coordinate consultations, referrals, and transfers between NICUs if
needed
For the intensive care unit physician staffing guideline, the
Coalition looks at whether the hospital operates a "closed" intensive care
unit for one or more of its adult ICUs and the ICU:
- Is managed by an intensivist (a board certified or board-eligible
physician in critical care medicine) who directs clinical care for the ICU,
monitors the admission and discharge criteria, and implements care
protocols.
- Has the intensivist and the primary surgical or medical physician
attending delivers care to patients.
- Has the intensivist available to the ICU from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and
during other hours has the intensivist available to the ICU by phone or
pager within 5 minutes
- Arranges for an specially qualified physician or physician extender to
be present in the ICU within 5 minutes.
Last modified
02/08/08