Hospitals Have No Room for Error on Policy & Procedure Communications during Fast-Moving Public Health Crises

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In 2006, it was Avian flu. In 2009, it was H1N1, also known as swine flu. This year, it’s Ebola.

When fast-moving public health crises hit, one issue that always comes under intense scrutiny is a hospitals’ ability to contain the threat. One of the key components of a hospital’s response must be excellent preparedness, founded on well-crafted and well-communicated policies and procedures concerning safety protocols. 

Unclear Policy and Procedure Communication Can Lead To Hazards

Communication issues, as seen throughout the recent Ebola crisis in the U.S., can lead to safety risks and loss of trust from employees, patients, local communities and public at large. Some nurses who were involved in the recent crisis stated that information on procedures wasn’t readily available; that the information they did have was conflicting and that pertinent information may not have been shared with all of the staff members who had a duty to know.

Mitigating the Risk of Policy and Procedure Missteps

In hospitals, developing, updating and communicating critical policies and procedures is not only a matter of providing the best level of patient care; it’s also about protecting the hospital’s reputation, complying with regulations, and in the case of Ebola, dialing down public panic.

(Scroll to the end of the post for links to access a complimentary three-part American Hospital Association webinar series on policy and procedure management.)

Technology that allows hospitals to create, update and share critical policy and procedure information with employees, easily and quickly, is becoming an increasingly vital tool.

Leveraging Policy Management Software during Crisis Events

During a fast-moving public health crisis, automated, centralized policy and procedure management tools can be leveraged to:

  • Centralize the most current policies, procedures and clinical guidelines in a standardized, manageable electronic format that all impacted staff can quickly and easily access—and that can be quickly updated and re-distributed as protocols change.
  • Quickly confirm that required staff have read and signed off on their understanding of critical information such as the Center for Disease Control’s Infection Prevention and Control Recommendations for Hospitalized Patients with Known or Suspected Ebola Virus Disease in U.S. Hospitals.
  • Easily generate reports that show what policies and procedures were in place at the time of alleged adverse events to improve defensibility and mitigate legal risk. 

Getting to Zero: Eliminating Missteps in Policy and Procedure Management 

Policy and procedure management systems that are decentralized, unorganized, paper-based or otherwise difficult to manage create risk at any time—but especially during times of heightened threats or chaos.

A systematic, centralized approach to policy and procedure management through the whole policy lifecycle—draft, review, approval, reference and certification—is an important tool in the defense arsenal against any public health crisis.

For more best practices on policy and procedure management, access a complimentary American Hospital Association webinar series:

 

 

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