Honored in caring for the most critical
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In the Saint Elizabeth Critical Care Unit a multi-disciplinary team meets in
the morning and discusses EVERY patient currently in the CCU. This is one of their
patient safety initiatives. |
Saint Elizabeth medical teams are excited about being invited to join the national network of mentor hospitals established by the IHI. As part of this network they will share with other hospitals across the country, the steps they take to achieve and maintain their phenomenally high levels of care which have been proven to save lives.
“Our Saint Elizabeth clinical staff really embraced the IHI interventions from the beginning,” explains Kim Moore, VP for nursing services. “The program provided an excellent goal that we could all rally around. It made preventing infections not just about prevention but about saving lives. That’s why we are continuing these practices.”
Superior successes
Among the six IHI interventions is one designed to prevent infections developing
in patients with a “central Line”---a spaghetti thin medication delivery tube
inserted under their collarbone. If an infection develops at this location it’s
especially dangerous, since it can spread directly into the blood stream. A series
of very specific, scientifically-grounded steps must ALL be accomplished to prevent
infections here. In an amazing display of dedication to clinical perfection, the
Saint Elizabeth Critical Care Unit (CCU) team marked more than one full year---actually
390 days---without a single central line infection!
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Intensivists-the Gold Standard
Teamwork in the CCU is also credited with their successes. A special group of in-house physicians heads up this process and offers what is now considered a national Gold Standard of care. They are called intensivists. They specialize in the critical care of hospitalized
adult patients. They may consult with other physicians or completely manage your
care during your stay in the critical care unit. They also work closely with your
personal physician and keep them apprised.
The head of the Saint Elizabeth intensivist program, Dr. Bill Johnson, explains
that they manage the care of each patient in the CCU in a rather sophisticated
manner. With today’s incredible technology and variety of |
procedures, treatments, medications, and so on available for patient care, an
organized approach has the best chance of success. This includes their daily multidisciplinary
“Rounds.”
“Every day begins with a multidisciplinary group meeting and discussing every
single patient. We check the details: their treatments, their medications, their
prognosis, every aspect of their care and evaluate how well they are improving.
It takes every member of that team to give each patient the most optimal ability
to recover well.”
Those teams include the intensivist physicians, nurses, pharmacists, respiratory
therapists, physical therapists, social workers---every person who has anything
to do with the patient’s medical care. |
![]() Barb George, RN and CCU director, along with Nancy Exstrom, RN, CCU educator,
and Dr Bill Johnson, intensivist, helped lead a successful 3-year campaign with
ZERO VAP infections in patients. |
American Hospital Association Honored Saint Elizabeth for Patient Safety
For nearly THREE years---1,190 days---the Saint Elizabeth critical care unit
(CCU) team had ZERO infections specific to patients with ventilators to assist
their breathing.
Because of this phenomenal work they were selected to be included in the American
Medical Association’s book, Community Connections Ideas & Innovations! |