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Liability and the EHR The Maine Association for Healthcare Quality Annual Fall Education Program November 28, 2012 Cheryl Peaslee RN, BSN, MBA, CPHQ Vice President, Risk Management

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Liability and the EHR

The Maine Association for

Healthcare Quality Annual Fall Education Program

November 28, 2012

Cheryl Peaslee RN, BSN, MBA,

CPHQ

Vice President, Risk Management

Objectives

• Identify EHR features that may contribute to safe patient care

• Recognize liability risks associated with use of the EHR

• Discuss strategies to mitigate EHR related liability risks

The story begins…

Chapter 1:

How did we get here?

ONC Data Brief ■ No. 1 ■ February 2012

Chapter 2:

The Dream

Welcome to Oz

EHR

• Improve health care quality, consistency, and patient safety

• Prevent errors and malpractice claims

• Promote complete documentation

• Provide timely access to patient information

• Facilitate sound clinical decision making

• Improve communication between providers

• Limit duplication of tests

Chapter 3:

The demise of the Wicked Witch of

the East

The Wicked Witch of the

West vows revenge …

What threats are we seeing?

Issues with…

• Cloning, Default, Cut and Paste

• Auto Population

• Hybrid Systems

• Lack of Integration

• Information Access Expectations

• Templates

• Clinical Decision Support

• E-Discovery

• Smartphones

• Security and Privacy

Information Overload

• Multiple sources of information

• Repetitive information

• Patient addendum

• Paper and electronic

In the Queue – Click Through

“ I was away from the office for 4 days and when I returned I had 452 items in my inbox! Do you really think I have the time to read each individually?”

The Lack of Integration

Integration is part of the impetus and objective for EHR adoption, yet even within some health systems this has yet to occur

The Devil in Design

From a Pediatric Cardiologist

If you type:

12# = pounds

12[space]# = kilograms

If you type:

12lbs = 12 pounds

But if you type 12 [space] lbs = 12 kilograms

“Of course there have been errors!”

EHR Event of the Month from PDR Network

The Audacity of Auto-population

In deposition, a neurologic exam of a 1-year-old boy revealed the boy was oriented to time, place, and person.

The plaintiff’s attorney:

• So is the information in this record accurate or not?

• Do you bother looking at your records?

• If these ‘auto-populated’ fields are incorrect, can we trust anything in this record?

• Do you deliver the same level of care as you do in your record keeping?

Medical eRisk Considerations for Online Communication

The Trouble with Templates

The Problem with Predesigned Processes

TEST ORDERED

TEST COMPLETED

RESULT RECEIVED

TO ORDERING PHYSICIAN INBOX

RESULT REVIEWED

TREATMENT PLANNED

PT NOTIFIED

Potential Problems with the Patient Portal

• MU: Use secure messaging to communicate with patients on relevant health information (more than 5%)

E-Communication

• Physician Insurers Association of America report:

o $71.8 million in indemnity payments were made for 786 telephone-related malpractice claims

Chapter 4:

More evidence of

issues…

The Apple Throwing

Trees

From Reports to the FDA

User Entry Errors:

• A technician mistakenly enters DOB of a baby instead of the study date, making a chest x-ray appear older than it was.

A radiologist viewed the image for central line placement.

Seeing that the comparison image did not have the line present, they concluded that the line had been removed and did not verify placement.

Unfortunately the line was placed too far in the infant and the pre-mature baby died.

From Reports to the FDA

• Three patients continued to receive antibiotics because a CPOE did not support discontinuation and modification of orders.

• Failure of a system to produce reports following a software upgrade was associated with a patient missing out on a liver transplant.

Clock Synchronization

An eight-minute difference was noted between the computer and the cardiac monitor…

Pennsylvania Patient Safety Authority

ECRI TOP 10 HEALTH TECHNOLOGY HAZARDS

FOR 2013

4. Patient/data mismatches in EHRs and other health IT systems

5. Interoperability failures with medical devices and health IT systems

9. Caregiver distractions from smartphones and other mobile devices

Caregiver Distraction

Resident was using her smartphone to enter an order to stop anticoagulation therapy

Before completing the order the resident received a personal text message

Resident responded to message by text, but never went back to complete the order

Anticoagulation therapy continued for several days

Pt developed conditions that necessitated emergency open-heart surgery

(Halamka 2011)

As Doctors Use More Devices, Potential for Distraction Grows

• Neurosurgeon making personal calls during an operation

• O.R. nurse checking airfares in the middle of a procedure

• Technicians monitor bypass machines while talking on cell phones; texting

AANA Position Statement:

“Non-essential distractions, especially those associated with use of mobile devices may lead to significant patient safety lapses”

U.S. Warning to Hospitals on Medicare Bill Abuses

The letter reminded hospitals that a patient’s medical information “must be verified individually to ensure accuracy: it cannot be cut and pasted from a different record of the patient, which risks medical errors as well as overpayments.”

Notes from Your Licensing Board

“The volume of repeated information in an EMR helps fulfill the necessary components of a visit that are required for Medicare billing, but often does not accurately or adequately represent what the physician has done.”

Chapter 5

And then there is…

The Field of

Poppies

Chapter 7

The Flying Monkeys

“I’ll get you my

pretty…”

Clinical Decision Support

• Clinical guidelines

• Clinical reminders

• Drug allergy alerts

• Drug–drug interaction alerts

• Drug–laboratory interaction alerts

• Drug dose support

Metadata

Metadata will show:

when a user logged in

what portions of the record were reviewed

how long review occurred

what changes were made

when the record was closed

James W. Saxton, Esq., is Chairman, Health CareLitigation Group and Co-Chair, Health Law Group,and Todd R. Bartos, Esq.,is a Shareholder, HealthCare Litigation Group,Stevens & Lee, P.C.

Discovery

Pertains to pretrial access to witnesses or documents:

• Oral depositions

• Interrogatories

• Paper documents/records

• Electronically stored information (ESI)

Legal Hold

• An unexpected acute negative patient event resulting in a significant injury

• Attorney requests for medical records for potential medical malpractice cases

• The pro se patient who submits a records authorization for the same purpose

Matthew P. Keris The Legal Intelligencer February 14, 2012

E-Discovery

Electronically stored information (EIS) in any medium:

• Emails

• Text messages

• Voice messages

• Mobile phone data

• iPad

• Thumb drives

• Camera

• Laptops

Electronic Discovery Response Plan

Where does the data reside for what dates?

Where is backup data stored?

Where are documents saved on the network?

Where are e-mail, text messages kept?

How is metadata obtained?

Is archive on local drives, removable media?

Must deleted files be recovered and produced?

In what form must the data be produced?

Can existing IT staff handle the workload?

Electronic Discovery and Record Production Sandra Nunn, MA, RHIA, CHP

The Printed Record

Electronic medical records were not meant to be printed.

Screen Shots from the Past

• 2007: 1st version of EHR when the care at issue occurs

• 2008: first request for record, upgraded to 2nd version

• 2009: suit is filed, 3rd version

• 2010: written discovery begins, 4th version is in place

• 2012: depositions occur, EHR in 6th version

Matthew P. Keris The Legal Intelligencer February 14, 2012

Chapter 8

Where will the road

lead?

The Future: Liability

• Better access to clinical information through EHRs could create legal duties to act on the information.

• Widespread use of clinical-decision support may solidify standards of care that might otherwise be subject to debate.

• Rise of HIEs may heighten clinicians’ duties to search for patient information generated by other clinicians.

• Failure to adopt and use electronic technologies may itself constitute a deviation from the standard of care.

The New England Journal Medicine

Chapter 9

But then there is the

Good Witch!

Progress in Achieving

the Dream

Yale–New Haven Hospital (YNHH)

When data indicated underuse of heparin, a process change occurred . Following the process change, correct dosing increased from 60% to 95%.

The Commonwealth Fund Using Electronic Health Records to Improve Quality and Efficiency

Sentara Norfolk General Hospital

Early warning system that displays patient room numbers:

• green - patient vitals are as expected

• yellow - some deterioration in patient condition

• red - prompts clinicians to log on immediately

This strategy has led to a reduction in codes.

The Commonwealth Fund Using Electronic Health Records to Improve Quality and Efficiency

New York–Presbyterian

Implemented a patient identification feature to avoid clicking on the wrong patient and mistakenly entering orders. Since implementing this feature, they have reduced wrong-order writing errors by 70%

The Commonwealth Fund Using Electronic Health Records to Improve Quality and Efficiency

Gundersen Lutheran Medical Center

A study of Gundersen’s experience* found positive effects on quality:

• medication errors per 1,000 hospital days decreased from 17.9 to 15.4

• “near misses” per 1,000 hospital days increased from 9.0 to 12.5, because more such events were identified after EHR implementation that would otherwise have gone unnoticed

• laboratory tests per week per hospitalization decreased from 13.9 to 11.4

The Commonwealth Fund Using Electronic Health Records to Improve Quality and Efficiency

Geisinger Wyoming Valley Hospital

Discharge Navigator program brings together key information needed to be discussed at team meetings.

A red/green light system indicates which providers have signed off on patient discharges.

They expect this tool to improve efficiency.

The Commonwealth Fund Using Electronic Health Records to Improve Quality and Efficiency

Chapter 10

The wizard leaves

without Dorothy…

Living in Oz

The Magic Wand

• Become “tech savvy” (Know What’s over the Rainbow)

• Learn from others (Courage, Heart, Brain)

• Be creative (Water on the Witch)

• Team up with IT, HIM, RM (Tin Man, Scarecrow and Lion)

• Be mindful of the potential for error (Wicked Witch)

• Acknowledge and use your SKILLS (Ruby Slippers)

Final Chapter

NAHQ: Standards of Practice

• promote quality efforts as a proactive, not reactive, undertaking

• establish quality as the guiding principle when exploring organizational efforts to control healthcare costs

• act as an agent of change and be effective in the change process, including:

o identifying opportunities to improve,

o resolving problems, and

o evaluating the effectiveness of change

Three things…

• Always watch out for the Wicked Witch of the West

• Embrace the power of your ruby slippers

• Remember that you are truly making a difference

The End

Disclaimer

This presentation is not intended to replace specific legal advice from an attorney; it is an educational program expressing views and opinions using generally acceptable risk management methodology.

Resources

• Electronic Health Record Systems and Intent to Attest to Meaningful Use among Non-federal Acute Care Hospitals in the United States:

2008-2011

• ONC Data Brief ■ No. 1 ■ February 2012

• Pennsylvania Patient Safety Authority

• The New England Journal of Medicine

• Matthew P. Keris The Legal Intelligencer February 14, 2012

• Medical eRisk Considerations for Online Communication

Resources

• The Commonwealth Fund Using Electronic Health Records to Improve Quality and Efficiency: The Experiences of Leading

Hospitals July 2012

• E-HEALTH HAZARDS: PROVIDER LIABILITY AND ELECTRONIC

HEALTH RECORD SYSTEMS Sharona Hoffman† & Andy Podgurski

• Do EHRs Increase Liability? Larry Ozeran, M.D. And Mark R. Anderson, FHIMSS, CPHIMS

• Electronic Discovery and Record Production Sandra Nunn, MA, RHIA,

CHP