How hospital leaders implemented a safe surgery protocol in Australian hospitals

Date

2012

Authors

Healy, Judith

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Abstract

Objective: To analyse the strategies used by hospital leaders to improve compliance with the 'ensuring correct patient, correct site and correct procedure protocol'. While following such a protocol saves lives according to an international study of the World Health Organization safe surgery checklist, promoting compliance in hospitals has proved to be a regulatory challenge. Design, Setting and Participants: Using a qualitative research design and 'responsive regulation' theory, this study explored implementation strategies used by hospital leaders in 20 Australian public hospitals. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 72 informants to analyse how front-line leaders improved compliance with the safe surgery protocol in their hospitals. Interventions: Implementation analysis of the safe surgery protocol. Main Outcome Measures: The use of implementation strategies located on a 'responsive regulation' pyramid. Results: Informants identified many strategies used to improve protocol compliance typically beginning with persuasion. Supportive strategies were located on a regulatory pyramid beginning with softer interventions: persuade, enlist leaders, train, remind, relax protocol requirements, redesign hospital systems and reward compliance. In response to low and slow compliance, many hospital leaders switched to a pyramid of escalating sanctions: direct, delegate, monitor, publicly report, reprimand and penalize. Conclusions: A multiplex problem requires graduated and multiplex regulation. Hospital leaders proved to be responsive regulators in applying both multiple supports and sanctions that improved compliance over 3 years. These experiences with protocol implementation illustrate the multifaceted challenge of health sector regulation and offer lessons for embedding future patient safety solutions.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: article; Australia; health care delivery; health care planning; hospital administrator; hospital planning; human; leadership; patient safety; practice guideline; priority journal; qualitative analysis; reward; Attitude of Health Personnel; Australia; Clin Guidelines; Hospital care; Patient safety

Citation

Source

International Journal for Quality in Health Care

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

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