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Non-specific or general CRP information
Learning Community
Resources associated with CAI Learning CommunityVideo
CRP related video, movieFDNH 3: Disclosure of Medical Error
Resources associated with CAI Learning Community
CRP related video, movie
The video includes three scenarios to demonstrate how different approaches to disclosure can have an effect on the course of communication with a patient’s loved one.
Disclosure Scenarios:
- Disclosure with No Apology
- Disclosure with Apology of Sympathy
- Disclosure with Apology or Responsibility
Journal Article
Published articles related to CRPImplementing communication and resolution programs: Lessons learned from the first 200 hospitals
Published articles related to CRP
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) published the Communication and Optimal Resolution toolkit, which is a guide for the implementation of communication-and-resolution programs (CRPs). These are holistic and systematic methods for preventing and responding to adverse medical events involving patients. The toolkit also guides on how to promote sincere communication between patients, families and the healthcare team; appropriate financial compensation; and efficient ways to decrease future adverse medical events. The authors describe their personal experiences with applying CRPs in their medical practices in more than 200 hospitals. From their experiences, the authors describe the obstacles that prevented the success of CRP implementation, as well as how they overcame them.
Institution/Organization/Business
Reference to primary CRP related organization (e.g. CAI website)Web resource/Digital Article
General website that contains CRP related information, may be non-specific or general or mixed resources on a website. Article published on-line. Not available as paper version.Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) and the National Patient Safety Foundation (NPSF)
Reference to primary CRP related organization (e.g. CAI website)
General website that contains CRP related information, may be non-specific or general or mixed resources on a website. Article published on-line. Not available as paper version.
The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) and the National Patient Safety Foundation (NPSF) started collaborating together to utilize its combined resources and knowledge to further patient safety efforts and create safety systems in various healthcare settings.
Journal Article
Published articles related to CRPLiability claims and costs before and after implementation of a medical error disclosure program.
Published articles related to CRP
In an era of calls for greater transparency in health care, disclosure is often cited as a practice necessary to physician ethics and patient safety. The University of Michigan Health System (UMHS) experience demonstrates that disclosure with offer can be conducted—in a setting similar to many other centers in the United States—without exacerbating liability costs. UW Medicine hope that this study will encourage further disclosure efforts, as well as the detailed evaluation of their effects.
Institution/Organization/Business
Reference to primary CRP related organization (e.g. CAI website)MACRMI
Reference to primary CRP related organization (e.g. CAI website)
The Massachusetts Alliance for Communication and Resolution following Medical Injury (MACRMI) created the Communication, Apology, and Resolution (CARe) Approach. This strategy aims to further patient safety by fostering honest communication, apologies, and just compensation in adverse situations. MACRMI partners with patient advocacy organizations to to teach health insurers and hospitals about this strategy.
Learning Community
Resources associated with CAI Learning CommunityVideo
CRP related video, movieMedical Error: A Case Based Approach to Apology and Disclosure Video – Brigham & Women’s Hospital
Resources associated with CAI Learning Community
CRP related video, movie
The video demonstrates how medical professionals can talk about medical errors with the care team, patients and their families. It includes two disclosure scenarios and didactic lecture on disclosure.
Key points:
- common emotional response
- preparing for the conversation
- the initial conversation
- avoiding common mistakes
- physician support
Meeting/Conference Proceedings
Meeting/Conference ProceedingsNorthwest Communication and Resolution Program Leader Retreat, Sept 2017
Meeting/Conference Proceedings
The Collaborative for Accountability and Improvement and the Foundation for Healthcare Quality hosted a two-day retreat in Seattle, Washington (09/2017) in which administrators and healthcare providers discussed ways to advance communication and resolution programs (CRPs) and other resources in Northwest Hospitals to increase patient safety and communication among hospital leadership, attorneys, and health insurers.
Journal Article
Published articles related to CRPNurturing a Culture of Patient Safety and Achieving Lower Malpractice Risk Through Disclosure: Lessons Learned and Future Direction
Published articles related to CRP
The University of Michigan Health System (UMHS) systematically adopted the “open disclosure with offer” model, a principle-based strategy that emphasizes honesty and disclosure, to effectively respond to adverse patient outcomes and healthcare malpractices. When the UMHS adoped this model, there was a gradual reduction in litigation fees and the number of malpractice and patient harm claims.
Institution/Organization/Business
Reference to primary CRP related organization (e.g. CAI website)Oregon Collaborative on Communication and Resolution Programs
Reference to primary CRP related organization (e.g. CAI website)
The Oregon Patient Safety Commission (OCCRP) seeks to advance, support, and encourage patient safety through education, shared learning, and improved transparency in Oregon. It is a multi-faceted, semi-independent state agency created by the state legislature to further patient safety in the state. The OCCRP operates multiple mission-driven programs, which include the Patient Safety Reporting Program, Early Discussion and Resolution, and various quality improvement initiatives.
Case Study
Journal Article
Published articles related to CRPPatients’ Experiences With Communication-and-Resolution Programs After Medical Injury
Published articles related to CRP
Institution/Organization/Business
Reference to primary CRP related organization (e.g. CAI website)Tool/Toolkit
CRP resource or tool (e.g. CANDOR)Process for Early Assessment, Resolution and Learning (PEARL), Risk Authority Stanford
Reference to primary CRP related organization (e.g. CAI website)
CRP resource or tool (e.g. CANDOR)
The Risk Authority Stanford is a healthcare risk management organization established at Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford Children’s Health, and Stanford Health Care. This organization developed the Process for Early Assessment, Resolution and Learning (PEARL), a communication-and-resolution program (CRP) aimed to approach unexpected adverse incidents with respect and honesty, which also decreasing litigation fees and overall risk. The Risk Authority also offers solutions and services to medical organizations and healthcare systems outside of Stanford.
Journal Article
Published articles related to CRPResponding to Medical Errors — Implementing the Modern Ethical Paradigm
Published articles related to CRP
In this New England Journal of Medicine Perspective, Thomas H. Gallagher, M.D., and Allen Kachalia, M.D., J.D explore how in the modern ethical paradigm, any time harm occurs, clinicians and healthcare organizations are accountable for minimizing suffering and promoting learning, and why doing so is especially challenging when the harm was due to an error.
Audio
Audio recording, Podcast, etc.RTE Radio 1 Interview with Jo Shapiro
Audio recording, Podcast, etc.
Dr. Jo Shapiro of Brigham and Women’s Hospital is interviewed about disclosure, peer support, and resilience following medical error on Ireland’s national public radio, RTÉ Radio 1 (July 9, 2017).
Tool/Toolkit
CRP resource or tool (e.g. CANDOR)Serious Illness Care Program COVID-19 Response Toolkit
CRP resource or tool (e.g. CANDOR)
Serious Illness Care Program COVID-19 Response Toolkit by Ariadne Labs, first version was published on April 3, 2020.
Ariadne Labs, one of Collaborative for Accountability and Improvement’s partners in cultivating high-quality, patient-centered care, has developed the Serious Illness Care Program’s COVID-19 Response Toolkit to help clinicians with difficult conversations with high risk COVID-19 patients.
Table of Contents:
- COVID-19 Conversation Guide for Outpatient Care
- Telehealth Communication Tips
- Recommendation Aid
- Care Planning Resources
In April 2012, Glenn Clarkson died after a medical error at a rural Kansas hospital. Melissa and Nancy Clarkson describe the three-and-a-half-years of work it took for them to learn what happened in his medical care. Filmed at the Communication and Resolution Program (CRP) Training.
Institution/Organization/Business
Reference to primary CRP related organization (e.g. CAI website)The Collaborative for Accountability and Improvement
Reference to primary CRP related organization (e.g. CAI website)
The Collaborative for Accountability and Improvement is a network based at the University of Washington, Seattle, composed of the physicians, attorneys, and insurers who pioneered the earliest CRPs in the United States. It is our belief that communication-and-resolution programs (CRPs) are an essential strategy for preventing medical errors and cultivating high-quality, patient-centered healthcare. Our mission is to radically accelerate the adoption of CRPs nationally and internationally, particularly through education, training, and hands-on support.
Institution/Organization/Business
Reference to primary CRP related organization (e.g. CAI website)Web resource/Digital Article
General website that contains CRP related information, may be non-specific or general or mixed resources on a website. Article published on-line. Not available as paper version.The Michigan Model: Medical Malpractice and Patient Safety at UMHS
Reference to primary CRP related organization (e.g. CAI website)
General website that contains CRP related information, may be non-specific or general or mixed resources on a website. Article published on-line. Not available as paper version.
University of Michigan Health System developed the Michigan Model. This approach involves reducing and acknowledging medical errors through open communication between the patient and health institution, peer-reviewing the complaints to analyze the cause of the adverse event and how to prevent it in the future, and meeting with the patient and legal counsel to discuss the adverse event. With these implementations, the University of Michigan Health System successfully helped reduce the number of malpractice accusation against physicians, medical error fees, and total time it takes to manage a malpractice claim. Thus, the University of Michigan Health System is a leading innovator in increasing patient care and safety while also decreasing the adverse outcomes associated with medical malpractices.
Learning Community
Resources associated with CAI Learning CommunityVideo
CRP related video, movieTHE ROLE OF THE DISCLOSURE COACH
Resources associated with CAI Learning Community
CRP related video, movie
Dr. Shapiro talks about the importance of having disclosure coaching program and fundamental principles of disclosure coaching. For more videos related to Disclosure and Apology, view the video gallery.
Video
CRP related video, movieThe Story of Michael Skolnik – YouTube Video
CRP related video, movie
The Medstar’s Patient Safety and Quality Program included this video in their patient safety and care program. This video illustrates the story of Michael Skolnik, who lost his life due to medical malpractice. The error involved the surgeon not being completely transparent with the patient or his family about the surgical procedure. This video emphasizes the importance of shared decision making between patients, families, and physicians to avoid future adverse medical outcomes, especially ones in which lives are lost.
Journal Article
Published articles related to CRPThird Things as Inspiration and Artifact: A Multi-Stakeholder Qualitative Approach to Understand Patient and Family Emotions after Harmful Events
Published articles related to CRP
Patient and family emotional harm after medical errors may be profound. At an Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) conference to establish a research agenda on this topic, the authors used visual images as a gateway to personal reflections among diverse stakeholders. Themes identified included chaos and turmoil, profound isolation, organizational denial, moral injury and betrayal, negative effects on families and communities, importance of relational skills, and healing effects of human connection. The exercise invited storytelling, enabled psychological safety, and fostered further collaborative discussion. The authors discuss implications for quality/safety, educational innovation, and qualitative research.
Institution/Organization/Business
Reference to primary CRP related organization (e.g. CAI website)Washington Foundation for Health Care Quality
Reference to primary CRP related organization (e.g. CAI website)
The Foundation for Health Care Quality is a Seattle-based nonprofit foundation that offers third party sources to everyone involved in healthcare, including physicians, patients, government organizations, and payers. The institution offers various resources to promote healthcare quality and patient care, such as assessment and communication-and-resolution (CPP) programs.
Web resource/Digital Article
General website that contains CRP related information, may be non-specific or general or mixed resources on a website. Article published on-line. Not available as paper version.When It Comes to Liability and Patient Safety What’s Good for Hospitals Can Be Good for Patient
General website that contains CRP related information, may be non-specific or general or mixed resources on a website. Article published on-line. Not available as paper version.
Michelle Mello, the Director of the Program in Law and Public Health at the Harvard School of Public Health, analyzed the effectiveness of communication-and-resolution programs (CRPs) in this article. She found that these models are efficient at addressing healthcare liability issues revolving around adverse medical outcomes. These programs offer a guide for healthcare professionals on how to disclose medical errors to their patients, while also developing ways to prevent future adverse events.
Audio
Audio recording, Podcast, etc.WIHI: What’s an Apology Worth? The Case for Communication and Resolution
Audio recording, Podcast, etc.
When a patient is unintentionally harmed during medical treatment, how should organizations respond?
Not that long ago, steps like these were unthinkable and, from a risk manager’s perspective, totally unwise. Today these practices are at the core of what are called communication and resolution programs (or CRPs), and their architects say there’s been a significant uptick in US health systems using them. Our guests are two leading experts on CRPs, Tom Gallagher and Allen Kachalia. They and a team of researchers have been teasing out the reasons why so many health care leaders are committed to the principles of CRPs, but hesitant to deploy the practices.
If you’ve been wondering what’s been going on with CRPs and new ways forward, this WIHI is for you.