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How Safe is Your Hospital? Great Plains Regional Medical Center received an “A” rating.

Washington, DC, June 6, 2012 – Approximately 400 people die every day because of hospital errors – the equivalent of a jet crashing

every day and killing all aboard. In response to this silent epidemic, more than 2,600 U.S. hospitals will now receive an A, B, C, D or F Hospital Safety ScoreSM based on patient safety via a first-of-its-kind initiative. A Blue Ribbon Panel of the nation’s top patient safety experts provided guidance to The Leapfrog Group, an independent national nonprofit run by employers and other large purchasers of health benefits, to develop the Hospital Safety Score. The Hospital Safety Score is calculated using publicly available data on patient injuries, medical and medication errors, and infections.

“The Leapfrog Group’s goal is to give patients the vital information they need and deserve before even entering a hospital,” said Leah Binder, president and CEO, The Leapfrog Group. “We hope people will use this score to talk with their doctor, make informed decisions about where to seek care, and take the right precautions during a hospital stay.”

For the first time, the Hospital Safety Score will highlight the country’s best hospitals and warn against the worst to save lives and bring attention to the nation’s silent safety epidemic. According to recent studies, one in four Medicare patients will leave a hospital with a potentially fatal issue they didn’t have prior to hospitalization. On average, one medication error per day occurs for each hospitalized patient, and more than 180,000 Americans die every year from hospital accidents, errors, and infections.

The Hospital Safety Score website – www.hospitalsafetyscore.org – allows visitors to search hospital scores for free, and also provides information on how the public can protect themselves and loved ones during a hospital stay. More information on the Hospital Safety Score can also be found on Sharecare, an online resource of health questions and answers, at www.sharecare.com/group/hospital-safety-score.  Patients should visit the Sharecare website for detailed questions and answers on how to stay safe and protect themselves during a hospital stay.

“The Leapfrog Group board has been frustrated with the lack of progress in improving patient safety, despite significant industry efforts over the past decade,” said David Knowlton, immediate past chair of The Leapfrog Group Board of Directors and chair of The Leapfrog Group’s Patient Safety Committee. “It is time for a game changer. It’s time to give American families the heads-up they need to protect themselves if they face the need for a hospital stay.”

The Leapfrog Group’s membership of employers and other purchasers of health benefits, and business coalitions on health across the country, will be working to engage communities, employers, health plans, and hospitals in using the Hospital Safety Score to improve safety. The Hospital Safety Score will be reissued using updated data in November 2012, with an annual Hospital Safety Score to follow in 2013 and beyond.

Key Findings
• Of the 2,652 general hospitals issued a Hospital Safety Score, 729 earned an “A,” 679 earned a “B,” and 1243 earned a “C” or below.
• A wide range of hospitals earned “As,” with no one class of hospitals dominating among those showing the highest safety scores. Hospitals earning an “A” include academic medical centers Massachusetts General, NYU Langone Medical Center, and University of California San Francisco. Many rural hospitals earned an “A,” including Grinnell Regional Medical Center in Iowa and Baptist Health South Florida Homestead Hospital in Florida.
• Hospitals with myriad national accolades, such as Mayo Clinic, Virginia Mason Medical Center, and University of Michigan Medical Center, each earned an “A.”
• Less predictable were the “A” scores earned by hospitals serving highly vulnerable, impoverished, and/or health-challenged populations, such as Bellevue Hospital, Montefiore Hospital, and Detroit Receiving Hospital.
• “A” scores were awarded to for-profit hospitals including many in the HCA systems, as well as hundreds of not-for-profit and public hospitals.
• Community hospitals showed excellence as well, such as OSF St. Joseph Medical Center in Illinois.

Not all hospitals earned an “A,” and there are some surprises, including hospitals with outstanding reputations for quality appearing with Hospital Safety Scores of “B,” “C,” or below. “The Hospital Safety Score exclusively measures safety – meaning errors, accidents, and infections. Even hospitals with excellent programs for surgical and medical care, state-of-the-art diagnostic equipment, and dedicated physicians may still need this score as a reminder that patient safety should be a top priority,” said Dr. Ashish Jha of Harvard, a member of the Blue Ribbon Expert Panel.

States had variations in performance. Massachusetts hospitals on average had the highest Hospital Safety Scores, while District of Columbia had the lowest average scores.

Methodology and Experts
Calculated under the guidance of The Leapfrog Group’s nine-member Blue Ribbon Expert Panel, the Hospital Safety Score uses 26 measures of publicly available hospital safety data to produce a single score representing a hospital’s overall capacity to keep patients safe from infections, injuries, and medical and medication errors. The panel includes: John Birkmeyer (University of Michigan), Ashish Jha (Harvard University), Lucian Leape (Harvard University), Arnold Milstein (Stanford University), Peter Pronovost (Johns Hopkins University), Patrick Romano (University of California, Davis), Sara Singer (Harvard University), Tim Vogus (Vanderbilt University), and Robert Wachter (University of California, San Francisco).

“Developing the Hospital Safety Score was an intensive nine-month process led by a group of patient safety experts from across the country, and we believe it resulted in a fair metric to assess a hospital’s performance on patient safety,” said Dr. Jha. “There is an overwhelming amount of information out there that could be useful when we are admitted to the hospital, but very few of us know what it is or where to find it. Everyone deserves the same information to protect their families. We’ve been glad to guide The Leapfrog Group in developing the Hospital Safety Score to give the public a way to guide their own decisions.”

The Blue Ribbon Expert Panel designed the methodology for hospitals with the most data publicly available at the national level: general short-stay hospitals. As a result, excluded from this first round of the Hospital Safety Score are critical access hospitals, specialty hospitals such as children’s hospitals and cancer hospitals, government hospitals such as VA and military hospitals, and long-term care facilities.
To develop the Hospital Safety Score, the Blue Ribbon Expert Panel gathered data publicly reported at the national level, including measures reported by the federal government via the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and the annual Leapfrog Hospital Survey. The final 26 measures calculated in the Hospital Safety Score cover falls and trauma, central line-associated bloodstream infections, very severe pressure ulcers, and preventable complications from surgery such as foreign objects retained in the body, postoperative hazards, and accidental punctures or lacerations. The Hospital Safety Score also credits hospitals on measures of the procedures and protocols known to prevent infections, errors and accidents, such as strong nursing leadership and engagement, hand hygiene policies, computerized physician order entry systems, adherence to medical and medication protocols that prevent complications, safety-first organizational leadership and culture, and the right level of staffing for the ICU.

Not all hospitals make the full list of 26 measures publicly available, in which case the Hospital Safety Score was calculated only for the available measures. The Blue Ribbon Expert Panel required at least 14 measures for a hospital in order to calculate a Hospital Safety Score. Those without 14 measures were not scored. Unscored hospitals include all hospitals from the State of Maryland, and certain territories including Guam and Puerto Rico, which the federal government excluded from required public reporting at the national level.

“Residents of Maryland, Guam, and Puerto Rico should be very concerned that they do not have information on safety that other U.S. residents have,” said Binder, a Maryland resident. “We will be working to improve hospital transparency, and people should contact their elected officials and local hospitals to insist on better public disclosure.”

For more information about the Hospital Safety Score, please visit www.hospitalsafetyscore.org. Journalists interested in scheduling an interview with a member of the Blue Ribbon Expert Panel or The Leapfrog Group should contact LeapfrogTeam@sternassociates.com.

 

About The Leapfrog Group
The Leapfrog Group (www.leapfroggroup.org) is a national organization using the collective leverage of large purchasers of health care to initiate breakthrough improvements in the safety, quality, and affordability of health care for Americans. The flagship Leapfrog Hospital Survey allows purchasers to structure their contracts and purchasing to reward the highest performing hospitals. The Leapfrog Group was founded in November 2000 with support from the Business Roundtable and national funders, and is now independently operated with support from its purchaser and other members.

 

 

Nebraska hospital safety scores

Alegent Health Bergan Mercy Medical Center, Omaha: A

Alegent Health Immanuel Medical Center, Omaha: C

Alegent Health Lakeside Hospital, Omaha: B

Alegent Health Midlands Hospital, Papillion: A

BryanLGH Medical Center, Lincoln: C

Columbus Community Hospital, Columbus: B

Creighton University Medical Center, Omaha: B

Faith Regional Health Services, Norfolk: B

Fremont Area Medical Center, Fremont: B

Good Samaritan Hospital, Kearney: C

Great Plains Regional Medical Center, North Platte: A

Mary Lanning Memorial Hospital, Hastings: C

Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha: C

Nebraska Methodist Hospital, Omaha: C

Regional West Medical Center, Scottsbluff: C

St. Elizabeth Regional Medical Center, Lincoln: C

St. Francis Medical Center, Grand Island: C

 

Source: www.omaha.com ; Omaha World Herald ;  June 13, 2012;  Report: Some area hospitals could be safer

 

Man treated for burns following a house fire

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A man has been taken to a hospital for treatment of burns following a fire that heavily damaged a house in east Lincoln.

The fire was reported around 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Some neighbors say they first heard explosions and then saw the flames.

The house and a garage were damaged, as was a neighbor’s house.

A firefighter was treated for heat exhaustion.

The fire cause is being investigated.

Thursday Sports Wrap – Heat Win NBA Title

NBA FINALS

King James finally crowned

MIAMI (AP) – The Miami Heat are NBA champions for the second time since 2006.

LeBron James had 26 points, 11 rebounds and 13 assists in an NBA Finals-clinching 121-106 rout of the visiting Oklahoma City Thunder.

James was named Finals MVP after capturing the first title of his nine year career. It’s his second season with Dwyane (dwayn) Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami after his self-proclaimed botched departure from Cleveland. Wade had 20 points in the clincher and Bosh contributed 23. And teammate Mike Miller went 7-of-8 from 3-point range en route to a 23-point performance.

Kevin Durant scored 32 points for the Thunder, who took Game 1 of the series and then dropped four straight.

MLB NEWS

Peralta appealing 8-game suspension…Beachy done for the season

UNDATED (AP) – Tampa Bay reliever Joel (joh-EHL’) Peralta has been suspended eight games for having pine tar on his glove.

Major League Baseball issued the penalty Thursday. Peralta has appealed, and pitched and gave up the go-ahead hit in a 5-2 Rays’ loss in Washington on Thursday night.

Peralta was ejected from Tuesday night’s game in Washington after umpires found pine tar on his mitt.

In other baseball news:

– L.A. Dodgers slugger Matt Kemp hopes to play in the All-Star game next month in Kansas City – as long as he’s sure he will be healthy for the stretch run with NL West-leading Los Angeles. He’s been on the DL all month with a hamstring problem.

– The Braves say right-hander Brandon Beachy has had successful elbow ligament-replacement surgery in his pitching elbow. Beachy faces a recovery period of at least one year. The Braves will recall right-hander Jair Jurrjens (jah-EER’ JUR’-jehnz) from Triple-A Gwinnett to fill Beachy’s spot in the rotation. Jurrjens will start Friday in Boston.

INTERLEAGUE

Athletics 4, Dodgers 1

Tigers 2, Cardinals 1

Pirates 9, Twins 1

Red Sox 6, Marlins 5

Nationals 5, Rays 2

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Rockies 4, Phillies 1

NBA FINALS

Miami 121, Oklahoma City 106 (MIA wins series, 4-1)

Jon & Kate getting along

Former reality stars Jon and Kate Gosselin had a very nasty public divorce a few years ago but after three years, the former couple is finally back on good terms. Jon Gosselin recently said, “Now Kate and I communicate great. It’s parenting together but in separate locations. She’s a great mother.”

  • Jon was also willing to take responsibility for his part in the divorce and it’s nasty aftermath. He explained, “I married at 22 and for 10 years I never went out. I reverted back to being 23. I didn’t realize how famous I was. I didn’t think because I was in the moment. I was passive aggressive. Then I’d get mad, but I wasn’t the one communicating.”
  • Jon and Kate enjoyed five seasons as reality TV stars on TLC’s Jon & Kate Plus 8. After the divorce, Kate continued the show under the name Kate Plus 8 for two more seasons. The couple has eight children: a set of 11 year-old twins and 8 year-old sextuplets.

Johnny Depp doing the right thing

Earlier this week actor Johnny Depp and his girlfriend, Vanessa Paradis, announced that they were splitting after 14 years. It appears the actor, who is worth $25 million, is going to do the right thing. Although he and Paradis were never married he is allegedly going to give her half of everything according to published reports. That’s quite a generous move considering he could have probably gotten away with giving her considerably less.

The couple has two children together: Lily-Rose, 13, and Jack, 9. The couple plans to remain amicable despite the split.

Justin Bieber gives to a fan

Justin Bieber loves his fans so much that he is willing to give them anything — including his own awards. According to TMZ, Justin left the stage after accepting his award for UR Fave Artist at the MuchMusic Video Award and was surrounded by many fans. Bieber handed over his award to one of the fans thinking that she was a show official.

Unfortunately, the girl wasn’t and real show officials demanded she return the trophy — which she did. Reportedly, now Bieber feels so bad about getting the girl’s hopes up that he wants to track down the fan to get her a replica of the award. Reportedly, the girl has not come forward yet.

That smell! Do you smell that smell? Dead carp show up along local waters

NORTH PLATTE, Neb. (AP) — Dead carp have been making a stinky mess along the shorelines of Lake Maloney and Sutherland Reservoir in western Nebraska.

People have buried some of the rotting carcasses, but there are too many to handle that way. Nebraska Game and Parks Commission biologist Jared Lorensen told local media that the fish “don’t smell too pretty.”

Lorensen says the problem began almost two weeks ago at the reservoir and started Monday at the lake.

So far the kill is only of carp. He says there are a couple of diseases that affect only carp, so they’re being checked. Test results could take a couple of weeks to return.

Water temperatures and oxygen levels have checked out within normal ranges.

Mother prostitutes her 14 and 7-year old daughters, man involved also charged

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A woman accused of prostituting her 14-year-old and 7-year-old daughters has been charged with sexual assault in another Nebraska county.

Authorities say a man who had sex with the older girl faces a new charge, too.

Local media reports that the mother has been charged in Furnas County with sexual assault of a child. She’s already charged in Buffalo County with child pornography and conspiracy to commit sexual assault of a child. The Associated Press is not using her name, to protect the privacy of her daughters.

Logan Roepke, of McCook, also has been charged with sexual assault in Furnas County. He faces similar charges in Buffalo County.

A phone listing for Roepke could not be found. His attorney didn’t return a call Friday from The Associated Press.

Cattle escape onto highway

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A highway near downtown Omaha has reopened after it was closed for nearly eight hours by cattle that escaped from an overturned trailer.

U.S. Highway 75 opened Thursday evening after wranglers rounded up the loose animals.

The accident happened about 10:30 a.m. when the truck crashed into overpass bridge and flipped, shutting down both sides of the highway.

Police say about 60 cattle were on the truck, and at least a dozen escaped. The others still in the trailer had to be transferred to another truck.

The highway reopened about 6 p.m.

Spokesman for Omaha Public Power District says he believes Fort Calhoun is safe

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Omaha Public Power District officials remain confident in their plan to improve the Fort Calhoun nuclear power plant, and they disagree with an environmental group’s petition to revoke the plant’s license.

OPPD spokesman Jeff Hanson said Thursday that the utility believes the nuclear power plant 20 miles north of Omaha is safe.

The utility also says the plant is an important part of its power-generating portfolio.

The Sierra Club of Iowa filed a formal petition with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission Thursday asking regulators to revoke Fort Calhoun’s license.

David Lochbaum, nuclear safety director at the advocacy group Union of Concerned Scientists, says the NRC probably receives a similar petition about once a month.

Most of the petitions are denied, but he said they can force changes at nuclear plants.

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