New tools aim to protect patient safety during health system mergers and acquisitions

For Immediate Release: April 6, 2018

BOSTON – Health system mergers, acquisitions, and affiliations can expose patients to significant, unintended harm if clinical leaders do not adequately plan for and manage safety risks.

To address this largely unrecognized issue, Ariadne Labs and CRICO/Risk Management Foundation of the Harvard Medical Institutions today released a new set of patient safety tools that equip clinical leaders to uncover important safety considerations and mitigate potential harm before and after the affiliation occurs.

Patient safety risks during health system expansion are described in an April 6 , 2018 JAMA Viewpoint by Ariadne Labs public health researchers Susan Haas, an obstetrician/gynecologist and visiting scientist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, and Atul Gawande, a professor at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, surgeon at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and executive director of Ariadne Labs, and CRICO President and CEO Mark Reynolds. Hospitals can have very different clinical capacities, patient populations, protocols, staffing structures, and cultures. The authors identify three ways those differences can compromise patient safety during system expansion:

  • New Settings for Physicians: When physicians are assigned to new sites, they often receive little or no orientation, leaving them to navigate new infrastructure, processes, teams, and clinical culture while treating patients.
  • New Patient Populations: Increases in patient volume, or the introduction of new patient demographics or medical conditions, can result in significant gaps in care if facilities are not prepared.
  • Unfamiliar Infrastructure: Changes resulting from the affiliation in supplies, equipment, formularies, protocols, and information systems can make routine tasks challenging for clinicians, slowing down care and introducing increasing risk of errors.

“When airlines merge, they follow a systematic process for putting pilots in unfamiliar planes,” said Haas. “In health care mergers and affiliations, however, we have been much less deliberate. And the danger from that is significant.”

A team of patient safety experts led by Haas and Gawande developed the new tools after dozens of interviews with health system leaders and clinicians involved with mergers, acquisitions, and affiliations. The tools include guiding principles for system expansion, a user’s manual, a series of discussion guides, and a joint clinical integration guide. Together, they provide clinical leaders from different health systems a guided communication process that:

  •      establishes guiding principles to specify a shared objective;
  •      fosters relationship building and teamwork;
  •      addresses areas of potential harm after affiliation begins;
  •      uncovers potential risks based on new settings, new patient populations, and unfamiliar infrastructure; and
  •      supports early planning to mitigate potential harms.

The Patient Safety During System Expansion tools can be downloaded on the Ariadne Labs website, as well as on the CRICO website.

Media Contacts:
Deborah O’Neil
Ariadne Labs
E: doneil@ariadnelabs.org
PH: 305-215-5675

Missy Padoll
CRICO
E: mpadoll@rmf.harvard.edu
PH: 617-450-6841

Ariadne Labs is a global leader in health systems innovation. A joint center of Brigham and Women’s Hospital and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Ariadne Labs saves lives and reduces suffering by improving the delivery of care at critical moments in people’s lives everywhere.

Founded more than 40 years ago, the CRICO insurance program has protected clinicians and organizations comprising the Harvard medical community. As a leader in medical professional liability, CRICO safeguards providers’ professional and personal lives through a comprehensive and robust defense strategy.