Joint Commission Launches Center for Transforming Healthcare to Address Patient Safety Failures

The Joint Commission has partnered with top hospitals and health systems across the country to launch the Center for Transforming Healthcare, an initiative that aims to use new methods to find the causes of and put a stop to dangerous and potentially deadly breakdowns in patient care, according to a Joint Commission news release.

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The Center’s first initiative is tackling hand washing failures that contribute to healthcare-associated infections that kill nearly 100,000 Americans each year and cost U.S. hospitals $4 billion-$29 billion annually to combat, according to the release.

Eight leading hospitals and health systems volunteered to address hand washing failures as a critical patient safety problem — one that requires fixes far more complex than just putting up signs urging caregivers to wash their hands, according to the release. Participants in the Center’s first project include:

• Cedars-Sinai Health System, Los Angeles, Calif.
• Exempla Lutheran Medical Center, Wheat Ridge, Colo.
• Froedtert Hospital, Milwaukee, Wis.
• The Johns Hopkins Hospital and Health System, Baltimore, Md.
• Memorial Hermann Health Care System, Houston, Texas
• Trinity Health, Novi, Mich.
• Virtua, Marlton, N.J.
• Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center, Winston-Salem, N.C.

Preliminary studies suggest that random observation is not enough to induce appropriate hand washing behavior. The targeted solutions from the Center now being tested education and accountability initiatives, using a reliable method to measure performance, frequent communication and real-time performance feedback.

The Center’s next patient safety challenge will target breakdowns in hand-off communications.

Read The Joint Commission’s release on the Center for Transforming Healthcare.

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