|
How sterile processing plays central role
in success 15
organizations highlight their ‘best practices’
Central service/sterile
processing and distribution professionals may be vital to hospital
performance and patient care quality, but their valuable contributions can
be overlooked or not taken seriously until an infection outbreak occurs or a
surgeon is rankled.
From cleaning, disinfection
and sterilization to customer service, kit/pack assembly, loaner implants,
maintenance and repair and quality assurance, CS/SPD could be classified as
a "hub" of the organization, as one CS department billed itself.
As a result, Healthcare
Purchasing News Senior Editor Rick Dana Barlow consulted with a variety of
experts on the provider and supplier sides for anecdotes, tips and tools on
best practices in sterile processing – on paper and in practice – as well as
with some of the recent years’ winners and finalists in HPN’s annual CS/SPD
Department of the Year Award.
What they had to say may be
old hat for some or helpful reminders for others, but at the very least
their words of wisdom should be educational and enlightening, if not
inspiring.
15 going on
52
• Always get manufacturing
recommendations in writing. Having the information in writing ends the guess
work. It’s a great reference to keep on hand in case the item is used
rarely, and we forget the process. The written information provides all of
the information needed to correctly process the medical device.
• Remember we are a service
department. We are here to service the direct patient care givers. If we
don’t do our job correctly, they cannot do their job correctly.
• [Quality assurance] checks
are very important. We get what we inspect, not what we expect. QA checks
need to be performed by checking work that is complete. These checks enable
us to see what quality of products we produce and may serve as a corrective
measure.
• Use mistakes as learning
tools and don’t repeat them.
• Know the AAMI standards.
Purchase the AAMI Steam Sterilization Standards ST 79. This document
provides the standards along with the rationale of why the standard was
written. It’s a great reference material.
• Achieve certification. It
gives you the knowledge needed to perform the extraordinary work we do
daily.
• Change cleaning solution
frequently. You don’t want to wash instruments in dirty water.
• Use rigid tray liners to
prevent tears in packaging.
• Use the right size brush for
the lumen you’re cleaning and discard worn-out brushes.
• Don’t spread thumb forceps
too far apart when cleaning them because that could damage them.
• Be sure to flush lumened
instruments.
• Wash your hands often.
– Susan Klacik
Corporate Director, Sterile Processing
Forum Health, Youngstown, OH
One story I have related to my
Central Service staff when I want to get the point across of giving your
best effort in whatever you do has to do with my experience on the swimming
team in college.
In college I swam both
freestyle and butterfly, with the ‘fly’ being my most successful stroke. The
following incident brings home that point. I had trained very
hard throughout the week in preparation for my match-up against my archrival
in the fly and our team’s archrival in the state. A swimmer was allowed to
swim two events in a meet so my coach placed me in the 200-yard freestyle as
well as the fly. Knowing that my ‘big race’ was coming up and I had no
chance of placing in the freestyle event, and deciding to save my
strength, I ‘dogged’ the race and finished about 5 seconds slower than my
usual time. My coach was really upset with my effort, and when it came time
to swim the ‘big race,’ he pulled me from the fly event and our team lost
the meet.
Dejected and embarrassed, the
next day during practice I went to the coach with my swimming gear in hand
and told him I no longer wanted to swim and that what he did caused our team
to lose the meet. He turned to me and said...’Don, yes, we did lose the meet
and as you know, you did not give our team your best effort in the
freestyle. If you remember this important lesson and always give your best
effort at whatever you do, we will win many future meets and you will become
a better person for the rest of your life. Now go back in the locker room
and get into the pool....practice has started!’
I never forgot those words and
went on to place 2nd in the state championships the next year. I have always
given my best effort throughout my life. That event and those words from my
coach, helped me to focus on my endeavors to achieve success
throughout life.
– Don Gordon, MPS, CRCST, FCS
Director, Central Sterile Processing
Hospital for Special Surgery, New York
First join a local or state CS
group. The networking is worth it. If there is no local or state group, join
one of the national groups. Why reinvent the wheel? The knowledge gained in
going to local and state meetings is worth its weight in gold. I made the
mistake of waiting almost one year before joining my local CS group. I could
have saved lots of time. I can say that I am very blessed that I have made
many close friends because of this. They have supported me in both my
personal and professional life.
Get all the publications you
can, read them and then share them with your staff. Put them out in the
break area. Some say knowledge is power; I say sharing knowledge is the real
power – the power to grow and make changes for better quality care
concerning the patient. This also includes guidelines and standards from
organizations like AAMI, AORN and the CDC.
Visit hospitals. Actually
looking at and walking around another department is worth its weight in
gold. Every department does something good. We all can adapt ideas and
processes from other hospitals. When you visit, take a staff member with
you. Having another set of eyes is great.
If your medical facility has
an OR educator this person should be one of your best friends. I have been
blessed with having many OR educators to mentor me in writing policy and
learning about my major customer the OR.
Lastly, ‘quality doesn’t cost,
it pays.’ Don’t take short cuts. Do it right the first time no matter how
hard it is. I learned the hard way. It is not about being right. It is about
doing the right thing. Quality in the long run will win out. If you keep the
patient first in your mind you will always do the right thing. I know it is
overstated but always look at the patient as one of your family. If that
does not motivate you to do the right thing each and every time, nothing
will and maybe you are in the wrong job.
– Stephen Kovach, Director of
Education
Healthmark Industries, St. Clair Shores, MI
Don’t underestimate the cost of a shutdown caused by a sterilant gas leak.
While sterile processing lacks the visibility of other departments, it is no
less important to the hospital, as rapidly becomes apparent if there is a
shutdown. The fastest and most likely way to a shutdown is a sterilant gas
leak, e.g., ethylene oxide (EtO) or hydrogen peroxide used to sterilize
heat- and moisture-sensitive items.
A few weeks ago, a large
hospital in Michigan experienced a leaking EtO sterilizer. Fortunately, they
had a continuous EtO monitor installed that detected the leak, so they were
able to take quick remedial action and prevent a minor leak from becoming a
major evacuation. The May EtO leak and subsequent evacuation, including the
ER in Pasadena, was highly publicized. Evacuations are more common than many
suppose and in one of the few studies conducted [La Montagne & Kelsey, K.T.
American Journal of Public Health, (1997), 87(7),
1119-1125] found that two-thirds of the responding hospitals (58 of 90)
reported evacuations of the sterilization department or area due to a real
or suspected EtO leak or alarms from 1985 to 1993.
Evacuation results in
expensive disruptions to throughput and shortages of equipment supplies to
the higher-visibility departments, and only if the leak is serious enough
for hazmat and later litigation lawyers to become involved does the cost of
the disruption alone appear to be more palatable. With most sterilant gases
being imperceptible to human senses until exceeding hazardous
concentrations, my advice is to install a continuous gas monitor since its
the only effective way to detect a leak and provide a warning promptly, and
to let the insurance adjuster sleep better at night.
– P. Richard Warburton,
Ph.D., Esq
Vice President, Research and Development and Chief Technology Officer
ChemDAQ Inc, Pittsburgh, PA
We all know that communication is the key to all our success. I had an
experience with a central processing staff that took communication to a new
level in this organization. The central processing staff was the recipient
of blame for all of the instrument issues that existed at the facility, such
as supply of instrument sets for procedures, broken instruments, missing
instruments and mislabeled instruments to name a few. The central processing
department manager took the following steps:
Set up weekly meetings with
the OR coordinators with the lead central processing technicians to discuss
problems. Problems that were identified were listed by specialty on a board
in the CS department, such as a change in an instrument set.
Central processing staff
members were selected as liaisons to the OR coordinators for their
specialties.
A weekly meeting was set on
Thursday to review the OR schedule for the next week to identify any
possible conflicts or deficiencies in instrumentation. The meeting was held
in the OR scheduling office with the OR schedulers, OR coordinators and CS
leadership. A plan was identified to meet the instrumentation requirements
of the OR schedule.
A central processing
technician was identified as the OR CS liaison. This staff member started at
6 a.m. and was in the OR checking that all instrumentation was sterile and
in the ORs for first cases of the day. The CS liaison received a report from
the OR charge nurse identifying OR schedule changes, emergency cases
scheduled and potential instrumentation needs.
As a result of the above
actions, the CS staff became more involved with the OR Schedule and demands
on a daily basis. Both the OR and CS staff became acutely aware of how
important it was to communicate changes and anticipate and respect the
workflow of both departments.
I believe this is an example
of best practice in CS by taking the initiative to improve process and
communication so both departments could productively and efficiently meet
the needs of their customers.
– Barbara Trattler, R.N., MPA,
CNOR, CNA, Director of Clinical Education
Advanced Sterilization Products, a Johnson & Johnson Company, Irvine, CA
BAMC’s CMS has an ‘Outpatient Service’ for
distributing prescribed disposable supplies, such as wound and ostomy
appliances, urological supplies, dressings, tapes, various lotions, skin
sprays, gloves and almost anything disposable that a patient would need for
home use. This is one of the wonderful benefits provided for our active duty
military and veterans. Instead of going to a drug store to purchase these
items, they can get a doctor’s prescription, and we provide the product for
them. If there’s a ‘special order’ item that we do not carry, the outpatient
supply technician coordinates the acquisition of the product through our
logistic support channels then calls the patient at home to let him/her know
when the product has arrived. We have several patients who have avoided
hospitalizations due to our intervention with their home-care needs — we
will do whatever we can to decrease or prevent a patient from being
hospitalized and instead, they can care for themselves in the home setting,
resulting in a better attitude and faster recuperation.
– Central Material Service
(CMS)
Brooke Army Medical Center, Ft. Sam Houston, San Antonio, TX
Implement and manage durable
medical equipment for patients with asset tracking technology for equipment
that functions on the same system as nurse tracking. This enabled our
hospital to move toward unit-based equipment. The system allows us to locate
needed equipment and shorten the delay for patient care.
Central service standards
committee, which has representatives from each of the four departments
within the system, meets quarterly to review and add policies and
procedures. We have established one standards manual for all hospitals.
Monitor daily productivity and
error rate in the following categories and present them to staff with open
discussion on possible solutions for improvements on a monthly basis as well
as balanced scorecards presented quarterly: Requisitions, par levels,
decontamination, prep and packaging, sterilization, code/trauma carts and
surgical case carts.
The key to success as an
organization is making sure staff members in every department are aware they
are a valuable piece of the puzzle. They also need to be able to see how
their piece of the puzzle helps present a perfect picture. Our central
service has found their piece to be continuous monitoring, evaluating for
improvements as well as being very involved with different branches of
patient care organizations within and outside the hospital.
– Central Services, CoxHealth,
Springfield, MO
As a component of the orientation of new staff members, they have an
opportunity to assist the OR personnel in setting up an OR room prior to the
beginning of a case. At certain times, personnel may also be asked to view
the procedure. Both of these experiences are designed to provide the sterile
processing staff a first-hand look at the duties of the OR nurses, the
challenges they encounter and how the work done in sterile processing
affects the work of the OR personnel, physician and ultimately the comfort
and satisfaction of the patient.
– Sterile Processing
Illinois Valley Community Hospital, Peru, IL
We are definitely the hub of our hospital. If anyone can’t find something,
doesn’t want it, doesn’t know where to put or doesn’t want to do it, it
falls to this department to accomplish.
All four employees are members
of the infection control committee. This committee works very hard to
monitor issues that arise hospital wide and host infection control
in-services. They have come up with fun ways to present the needed and
somewhat dry topics. A few of the in-services included, ‘Survivor’ theme,
‘Healthcare High School,’ and ‘Who Wants to Be a Billionaire.’
– Central Service
Kit Carson County Memorial Hospital, Burlington, CO
VMMC
is very involved with the development of a Lean Production System based on
the lean principles of providing the customer what they want, when they want
it in the amount required. By using the Lean Principles, they mapped the
steps in the processes and eliminated all wasteful steps. Using the lean
methods the team was able to eliminate 2.5 FTE’s. The team was able to
transfer one of the FTEs to supply distribution. All of the team worked
together to make these changes happen and they have sustained their gains.
The decontamination process is now completed in 32 percent less time and all
staff members have standard work procedures.
The IDN modified the Toyota
Production System for healthcare operations and renamed it the Virginia
Mason Production System, which CS adapted for its own improvement. The
department targeted productivity, walking distances, parts traveled
distance, safety, work-in-progress, inventory and physical space and devoted
special emphasis on the value stream, which represents a conceptual ‘map’ of
a process, and to the definition of standard work.
Virginia Mason uses
cross-functional, multidisciplinary work teams that gather for five days in
Rapid Process Improvement Workshops (RPIW) to analyze procedures, processes
and performance facility wide and make improvements using lean thinking as a
guidepost. CS conducts its own internal improvement seminars, which has led
to efficiencies in its four primary functional areas: Sterile processing,
supply distribution, linen and equipment.
The group used lean thinking
to increase sterile processing productivity and maintain quality as surgical
cases grew in volume and complexity. When the staff looked at the process of
set assembly they found that the highly skilled instrument technicians were
frequently interrupted, lacked teamwork and often participated in tasks that
required little skill or training to accomplish. So the team established a "waterspider"
or "waterstrider" role to solve problems. Typically, staff members
responsible for assembling surgical sets complete their tasks in individual
workstations where they remain for an entire shift. CS technicians serving
as waterspiders, named for the bugs that can literally walk on water, select
the next set for assembly, print a computer-generated recipe, prepare the
set for assembly and perform an initial assessment for cleanliness. Then an
instrument technician takes over and physically assembles the set, which
includes a second check for cleanliness. Once that set is complete the
instrument tech moves to the next available standard table already set up
for them and focuses on accurate assembly.
The distribution team also
implemented a number of operational and process efficiencies through lean
thinking and without the use of costly technology. Instead, it used a kanban
(pronounced "kahnbahn"). It’s a colored card placed at a reorder point in a
bundle or stack of supplies. Once the kanban is reached the card is pulled
and placed in a collection bin checked by CS regularly.
The group worked together to
develop a regional Linen Disaster Plan after 9/11. It not only included 19
hospitals but two other laundry services joined for a unified treatment of
laundry during a disaster. We provided information for biological, chemical
and natural disasters for conservation, use and disposal of linen, depending
on the circumstances.
– Central Services
Virginia Mason Medical Center, Seattle
Hamot
formed specialty teams that coincided with the care teams in the surgical
suite. The central sterile processing team members became experts in the
trays related to their service area, while also maintaining competency in
the other areas. They developed a CPD Pick List that printed the supplies,
trays and linens that were required from their department only. At the same
time, they lettered the storage racks and numbered their shelves in the area
that houses the supplies where case carts are picked. Next they assigned a
‘location’ to each pack, instrument tray, supplies and linens. This
information was loaded into the operating room information system, which
allowed them to generate a report that is sorted by general location and bin
location.
When the CPD Pick List is
printed, the supplies are listed in the order they appear on the rack and
shelves. These efforts resulted in a decrease in the use of paper and a
50-percent reduction in the amount of time it takes to pick a case cart.
The central sterile processing
team also began putting minor equipment on their case carts, such as things
that would be used immediately (e.g., sequential compression devices). They
soon expanded their role to become a centralized distribution point for
other patient care equipment, such as pacemakers. They were responsible for
finding, testing and cleaning the pacemakers, as well as implementing a
process for battery changes and testing. They created centralized locations
for them, and our staff made sure they were in good working order. Because
of their focused attention, we were able to reduce the different varieties
of pacemakers, standardize their equipment and create a process to support
our patients in terms of timeliness of access to devices.
The team’s most successful
project in terms of equipment management has been the IV infusion pumps. The
staff is responsible for cleaning the pumps between patients, pulling the
pumps for preventive maintenance, ensuring the devices are plugged in and
charged when they are not in use and making sure each unit has enough to
service their patient population. The staff also assumed the responsibility
for downloading IV pump data on a weekly basis.
Every piece of equipment is
treated as if it would be used on one of our own family members. For this
reason, our staff uses innovative approaches to gain staff support in caring
for this million-dollar resource. The team created a poster campaign that
outlined the facts of what actually occurred when an infusion pump was left
unplugged and the battery died.
– Central Sterile Processing
Hamot Medical Center, Erie, PA
Each OR specialty has a matching coordinator, educator and SPD point person.
This aligning of service lines assists with communication and efficiency.
Each SPD shift team leader has a counterpart in the OR. Their frequent
communication allows SPD to flex and readjust priorities as the OR schedule
changes due to emergencies and cancellations.
The tracking of loaner
instrument trays is a common problem in many hospitals. The SPD team devised
a tracking system that is simple to use and very efficient. It involves a
four-page carbon copy tracking form. The sales representative fills out the
form with all required information. The SPD tech then checks the instruments
and determines their priority in the cleaning and sterilization process. The
white sheet (original) is placed in the SPD Loaner Logbook. The pink copy
goes to processing so the personnel sterilizing instruments can prioritize
their work. The yellow copy is placed on a case cart or specific shelf in
the case cart area awaiting the cooled sterile instruments. The last copy is
returned to the OR by the sales representative. He places it on a specific
bulletin board for the orthopedic specialty coordinator or ortho team member
to review as they prepare for the day’s schedule. If there is a question
concerning whether a loaner tray was delivered and processed, this paper
trail leads personnel efficiently in the right direction.
– Sterile Processing
Poudre Valley Hospital, Fort Collins, CO
In its two-room sterile storage area, the material processing team decided
to mimic the storage patterns of any major manufacturing and retail
businesses to better reorganize a layout that included disposables, peel
packs and trays mixed together. They split the two rooms into two sections.
The first room contained all of the disposable supplies and linen with like
items placed together; the second room housed all of the bundles, peel packs
and trays, the latter of which were organized by service. After looking at
lead time, use, unit of measure, unit of issue and whether an item was stock
or non-stock, the team was able to "right size" the inventory.
To prevent missing or
misplaced instruments, they created an instrument facilitator position to be
responsible for sorting and tracking trays at the point of use. Equipped
with a voice pager for surgery to call immediately after a case, this person
gathers all the sets in a soiled utility room designated by surgery, scans
the sets using an information system, sorts them, restrings, opens and
disassembles all instruments and sprays them down with foaming enzymes. As a
result, the facilitator can ascertain when an instrument disappears before
leaving surgery.
– Material Processing
Reid Hospital & Health Care Services, Richmond, IN
Using
a digital camera we put instrument pictures in the count sheet format as a
reference, which helps with specialty trays. Because some instruments are so
similar that only looking under a magnifying light will you see the
difference, the picture gives us a visual to zone in on. We also take
pictures of loaner trays for more accuracy in placing the instruments.
We show appreciation. With the
mindset of getting more with honey than with vinegar, we started with the
ancillary departments. Looking for procedures and processes being done
correctly or as requested, we started writing ‘Thank You’ notes. Skepticism
turned to surprise and a smile when they realized we were not being
sarcastic but meant what we said in the note. Having the procedure done
correctly is now the norm instead of the exception. We carried this same
concept into the OR by using a communication board to list ‘appreciations’
for improved communications and procedures.
– Central Sterile Processing
Heart of Lancaster Regional Medical Center, Lititz, PA
To
reduce and prevent instrumentation loss, the central sterile supply team
created a chart that illustrates the monthly and quarterly expense of basic
instrumentation replacement. The chart identifies instruments lost and the
quantities, along with their prices, and tabulates total costs over time.
The chart is conveniently posted next to the OR schedule, courtesy of the
assistant director, and in the central sterile processing area.
CSS implemented overlapping
staff schedules, assigning staff to start work when the highest volume of
instruments arrives in the department.
The team implemented a variety
of quality assurance and safety protocols on all instruments and equipment
prior to use on a patient. One involves a safety check on all minimally
invasive instrument shafts for pinholes and insulation failures before a
surgeon works with them. CSS, infection prevention and control and surgical
services also conduct random samples of finished products processed in the
department.
They capture daily the cost of
all transactions using an internally developed software program. For sterile
processing they record such data as changes of a count sheet to the charges
associated with running validation tests on new trays. For supply
distribution, they record the cost of medical/surgical items for those units
that are not connected to the hospital information system.
All new employees are not
assigned to their shift until t hey are fully educated and prepared to
perform the functions of a CSS technician. CSS has a dedicated training
coordinator who trains new staff, maintains staff competences, supports
customers with in-services and education on issues related to instrument
processing and supports the CSS managerial staff competencies.
CSS also developed a ‘section
expert program’ that assigns designated subject matter experts to different
surgical service section areas. They serve as liaisons with nurse managers
and nurses to achieve complete trays all of the time.
– Central Sterile Supply
NYU Medical Center, New York  |