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ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS AND JUST CULTURE: A PRACTICAL APPLICATION TO DRIVE IMPROVEMENT Sheila Yates, MPH, CPHQ

Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

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Page 1: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS AND JUST CULTURE: A PRACTICAL APPLICATION TO DRIVE IMPROVEMENT

Sheila Yates, MPH, CPHQ

Page 2: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

OBJECTIVES

Participants will gain an understanding of Just Culture as a framework to employ Root Cause Analysis (RCA) at their own sites

Participants will gain an understanding on RCA as a tool for evaluation of clinical and administrative quality issues

Participants will practice RCA using scenarios and be able to replicate use of the tools with their own teams

Page 3: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

AGENDA

Page 4: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

A Just Culture is Defined as :

A fair and consistent environment that fosters open

communication, transparency, voluntary error reporting,

information sharing and a willingness to do the right thing!

Page 5: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

Just culture is about:

A fair and consistent environment, open communication and a focus on learning

Reviewing contributing factors then determining accountability

Creating systems that promote patient safety

Including human error factors and systems thinking

Cutting across all levels of staff

Reinforcing the roles of risk and continuous quality improvement

Page 6: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

NAME/BLAME/SHAME CYCLEEmployee

takes action that

contributes to error

Employee is punished

Reduced trust as

employee view as

“scapegoat”

Employees become

silent (CYA) less

reporting

Management less aware

of conditions

Errors more likely

Page 7: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

DETERMINING INDIVIDUAL VERSES SYSTEM ACCOUNTABILITY

•Deliberate Act Test: Did the employee intent the act or the outcome?

•Incapacity Test: Did the employee come to work impaired

•Compliance Test: Did the employee knowingly and unreasonably increase risk?

•Substitution Test: Would another similarly trained employee in the same situation act in a similar manner?

Page 8: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

FINAL WORD

We are all human and humans are not perfect

No one should be punished for reporting an “honest” mistake

We can’t fix something if we don’t know it’s broken

We all own the responsibility for speaking up and reporting

Be willing to expose areas of weakness as much as areas of excellence

Page 9: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

WHAT IS ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS?

A problem-solving approach to identify the underlying causes of problems or events

The goal is to discover:

oWhat happened?

oWhy did it happen?

oWhat can be done to prevent recurrence?

The outcome is a structured plan to prevent future events

Page 10: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

WHEN SHOULD YOU DO AN RCA?

Following a serious event

If a trend shows an increase in errors

To solve system issues

To improve customer service

Page 11: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

THE RCA PROCESS

Page 12: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

SETTING THE STAGE

Schedule RCA meeting as soon as possible so that memories are fresh

Clearly communicate the purpose of the meeting

Team should be those involved in the event

Establish ground rules:oAvoid blaming or finding fault

oCommit to finding solutions

Page 13: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical
Page 14: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical
Page 15: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

TOOLS

Sequence of Events

Cause and Effect Diagrams

Contributing Factors

5 Whys

Page 16: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

METHODS TO DETERMINE WHAT HAPPENED

Recreate the sequence of events and learn the basic facts by:

Investigative individual interviews

Chart or record audits

Group processing

Page 17: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical
Page 18: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

CAUSE AND EFFECT DIAGRAMS

Cause and effect diagrams also called Ishikawa diagrams or more commonly called fishbone diagrams are used to map out the causes of a specific event

They are best used to identify and explore potential root causes in a detailed and graphic manner often in a group setting

They allow the team to see causes related to a process, procedure or system failure

Page 19: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical
Page 20: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical
Page 21: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

CONTRIBUTING FACTORS CATEGORIES People : Staff

People: Patient

Communication

Environment

Equipment & Supplies

Policies & Procedures

Leadership Activities

Page 22: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

5 WHYS

A method used to explore the underlying relationship of a problem by looking at the cause and effect.

Helpful when problems involve human factors and interactions

You may need one “why” or you may need six

Page 23: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical
Page 24: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

FINAL REPORT AND ACTION PLAN

All action plans should identify specific action items, measures of effectiveness, the time frame and staff accountability.

The facilitator should commit to the time/date of when the final RCA summary will be sent to the team members for review.

The team should be thanked for taking the time to participate in this important process and often a brief a meeting evaluation tool is used to gather feedback on the overall process.

Page 25: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical
Page 26: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

BEST PRACTICES

Do not include any patient identifying information on RCA notes

Be aware of any state specific requirements - check with your local counsel

Update policies based on event findings

Try on a more minor event first – get familiar with the tools

As the facilitator, it is your role to keep the pace moving, it is very easy to get side tracked.

Page 27: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

ENGAGING LEADERSHIP

Provide overview on the benefits of the RCA process and implementation a Just Culture program

Discuss what is currently happening and preventative strategies

Inform them upon RCA completion

Discuss the team’s action plan

Ask them how they would like to be involved

Page 28: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

GROUP ACTIVITY

Break into groups of 4-5

Using Fishbone template and Contributing Factors handouts, choose one of the scenarios (or one of your own) to practice filling in the Fishbone template

Time: 15 minutes

Page 29: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical
Page 30: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical

A CHALLENGE TO YOU

Integrate Just Culture into your policies and procedures

Reinforce the importance of reporting incidents and learning from mistakes

Build trust and reinforce the importance of inquiry and RCA’s

Provide trainings on Just Culture and RCA tools

Page 31: Root Cause Analysis and Just Culture: A Practical